DECEMBER 2025LOGISTICS AND TRANSPORTATION REVIEW 6 Copyright © 2025 ValleyMedia Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part of any text, photography or illustrations without written permission from the publisher is prohibited. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts, photographs or illustrations. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the magazine and accordingly, no liability is assumed by the publisher thereof.DECEMBER 2025, volume 08 - Issue 10 (ISSN 2836-533X)Published by ValleyMedia, Inc. To subscribe to Logistics and Transportation ReviewVisit www.logisticstransportationreview.comManaging EditorStephanie MatthewEditorial StaffJoe PhilipLaura PintoMatthew JacobDaniel HolmesLeah JaneYenny TurnerVisualizersIntelligent Solutions Driving the Future of Logistics*Some of the Insights are based on the interviews with respective CIOs and CXOs to our editorial staffEmail:sales@logisticstransportationreview.comeditor@logisticstransportationreview.commarketing@logisticstransportationreview.comEditorialStephanie MatthewManaging Editoreditor@logisticstransportationreview.comStephanie MatthewKevin ParkerTom hanksContainer yards are closing out 2025 looking very different from the manual, equipment-heavy spaces they once were. The industry has crossed a threshold: automation is no longer an experiment, but the operating baseline. Smart cranes, autonomous vehicles and digital twins now drive precision in stacking plans, vessel call modeling and dwell-time forecasting. That accuracy is reshaping expectations, pushing operators toward predictive maintenance, reefer tracking and dynamic slot allocation to keep cargo flowing even in the year's busiest peaks.What's striking is how storage itself has been redefined. It's no longer a siloed cost center but part of a unified logistics precinct, where documentation, consolidation, light processing and warehousing are seamlessly connected. The most competitive players treat their yards as intelligent ecosystems, leveraging software and data to turn storage into a strategic advantage. With the logistics and transportation market projected to reach USD 17.1 billion by 2034 at a 6.3 percent CAGR, the lesson of 2025 is clear: precision, connectivity and automation aren't optional upgrades; they're the new rules of the game. The magazine features a thought-provoking article by Greg Javor, SVP of Global Supply Chain Operations at Mattel. In it, Javor highlights the need for adaptive leadership, rigorous service excellence and data-driven logistics to navigate today's disrupted supply chains, while underscoring how people, technology and purpose will shape a more resilient future. Additionally, an article by Romie Montpeirous, Director of Logistics, at Southern Glazer's Wine & Spirits, explores how unified logistics solutions, adaptable leadership and emerging technologies are transforming supply chain efficiency and workforce readiness.The cover story spotlights ConGlobal, a technology-driven logistics leader redefining yard operations with real-time visibility, AI intelligence and a strong North American depot network. By pairing its physical infrastructure with the Aviro360 platform, ConGlobal delivers the clarity and control that turn storage, equipment management and yard flow into strategic advantages.We hope this issue equips logistics leaders and supply chain strategists with the clarity needed to operate in a sector now defined by automation, visibility, and intelligent infrastructure.Let us know your thoughts!
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