The Supply Chain Hub is a live, public deployment of the KnowledgeBricks knowledge layer, seeded with S&OP design, network optimization, procurement strategy, demand planning, inventory positioning, and supplier risk expertise. It exists to demonstrate that the same platform absorbs an adjacent operating domain without re-architecting.
This hub is one example. The same platform can be seeded with your organization's tribal knowledge in any operating domain.
The Supply Chain Hub is not the product. It is a live stress test of the KnowledgeBricks platform across a second operating domain, adjacent to the Logistics Hub, drawing on different expertise, and produced by the same underlying architecture. When you browse it, you are evaluating four properties that transfer to a private deployment in your organization.
The same vault-to-RAG-to-Skills architecture that powers the Logistics Hub powers this one. No code changes. No bespoke pipeline. The platform is brand-agnostic and domain-agnostic, what changes between deployments is the seed content and the Skills configuration, not the architecture underneath.
Ask the hub about S&OP cadence, inventory positioning, or supplier risk. Every answer is grounded in vault entries the system can cite. No ungrounded LLM responses, no hallucinated benchmarks. The same retrieval discipline applies in a private deployment, including access control enforced before any model call.
S&OP Redesign, Network Rationalization, Inventory Policy Review, Supplier Diversification, each is a structured multi-turn workflow that ends with a usable document, not a chat transcript. In your own deployment, Skills are configured to your processes and your deliverable formats.
The nightly pipeline monitors what the hub gets asked, identifies thin coverage, runs candidate research, and queues entries for practitioner approval. The vault has been compounding since launch, and the same loop runs inside a private deployment, surfacing gaps for your team to validate.
The Supply Chain Hub vault covers nine practitioner-authored pillars, from the moment a demand signal enters a planning system to the moment product reaches the customer. It is reference-grade content seeded by people who have run S&OP processes, designed networks, and managed strategic supplier portfolios.
These Skills show what the engine produces in a supply-chain context. In your private deployment, the same engine runs workflows configured to your own processes and deliverable templates.
Builds an S&OP redesign brief: cadence design, meeting architecture, data requirements, cross-functional alignment, and implementation sequencing. Output is a project charter a steering committee can act on.
Frames a network rationalization case: evaluates current node footprint against volume, service-level, and cost targets and produces the analytical structure for adding, removing, or repositioning nodes.
Assesses safety-stock logic, reorder points, and cycle-stock targets against demand variability, lead times, and service requirements. Output is a policy review with prioritized adjustments.
Public, seeded by KnowledgeBricks practitioners with general supply-chain expertise. Useful for anyone evaluating the architecture, but tuned to nobody in particular. Skills produce generic deliverables that demonstrate engine quality, not your firm's specific RFP format or assessment rubric.
Private to your tenant. Seeded by structured elicitation with your senior planners, sourcing leads, and S&OP owners. Skills configured to your S&OP cadence, your inventory model, your supplier-risk taxonomy, your procurement decision rubric. Connected to your ERP/PLM/planning environment via external KB APIs.
The platform behind this hub deploys against your organization in two to four weeks. A scoping call defines the elicitation program, the integration points, and the deployment timeline, and you keep the scope document either way.
No commitment required at scoping stage.