NOVEMBER - DECEMBER 2025LOGISTICS TRANSPORTATION REVIEW6 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.NOVEMBER - DECEMBER 2025, volume 08 - Issue 07 (ISSN 2836-533X)Published by ValleyMedia Inc. To subscribe to Logistics Transportation ReviewVisit www.logisticstransportationreview.comManaging EditorStephanie MatthewEditorial StaffJoe PhilipLaura PintoMatthew JacobMerlin WatsonDaniel HolmesLeah JaneYenny TurnerTiffany HayworthWhere Automation Finds Balance with Workforce Harmony*Some of the Insights are based on the interviews with respective CIOs and CXOs to our editorial staffEmail:sales@logisticstransportationreview.comeditor@logisticstransportationreview.commarketing@logisticstransportationreview.comEditorialFrom bustling retail hubs to round-the-clock manufacturing plants across the APAC region, the question has shifted from who works where and when to how intelligently the schedule itself adapts. Automated scheduling and workforce management platforms are emerging as the silent backbone of productivity, aligning labor, demand and compliance in real-time.These systems go far beyond static calendars. AI engines forecast workload fluctuations, map employee availability and match shifts with skills, certifications or fatigue limits. Cloud dashboards update minute by minute as managers approve requests, automate replacements or adjust coverage. For the worker, it means clarity and predictability; for the enterprise, a schedule that breathes with the rhythm of its operations.In markets such as Singapore, Australia and Japan, where labor costs are rising and flexible work is gaining policy support, adoption is accelerating. The manufacturing and service sectors are digitalizing shift planning to offset labor shortages, while emerging economies in Southeast Asia are utilizing mobile-based scheduling to unify large, distributed workforces.The numbers mirror this transformation. The global workforce management market is projected to reach $22.4 billion by 2030, with APAC recording one of the fastest growth rates. The magazine features a thought-provoking article by Nathan Kurland, Chief Revenue Officer at Trimac Transportation and Guillaume Couture, Quality Assurance Manager, Kerry.We hope this edition offers insights that help business leaders and workforce innovators navigate change, strengthen operational agility and stay prepared for what's next in a region where automation, data intelligence and cloud-driven scheduling are redefining the future of productivity, performance and people management across the Asia-Pacific. Let us know your thoughts!Stephanie MatthewManaging Editoreditor@logisticstransportationreview.comStephanie MatthewVisualizersCelestial JordanPresley Meadow CANADACANADA
< Page 5 | Page 7 >