One Crate at a Time: How the Tuesday Forecast is a Wager for Produce Visibility
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In this episode of Decisions at the Fulcrum, we look at BrightSide Produce, a produce distributor that works in impoverished parts of San Diego County, and discover that food availability isn't only a matter of supply, demand, or good intentions.
It's a complex situation with coordination, not optimization.
Let's follow BrightSide Produce through forecasting discussions, uncertain delivery trajectories, and the hushed aftermath of decisions that never prove to be right or wrong. Along the way, I explain how uncertainty in food distribution is not a mistake to be corrected, but rather a reality that organizations must learn to live with.
Using principles from communication studies, notably the premise that organizations are formed through communication, this episode investigates how inventory models, explanations, and common interpretations keep fragile systems together. I investigate how judgments about waste, stockouts, and risk do more than just allocate produce: they define what accountability, access, and success mean in practice.
Cited Case: Pyke et al. (2024) Sage