Labor Day has always been one of my favorite holidays. Maybe it’s because it comes with a sense of closure to summer or because it’s a day to slow down and spend time with family and friends. Like many of you, I’ll probably be behind a grill this weekend, cooking steaks, enjoying a last hurrah at the beach, and taking a moment to appreciate the value of hard work.
And as I think about the meaning of Labor Day, the first holiday created to honor the contributions of working men and women, I can’t help but reflect on how the very concept of “labor” is being redefined. For the first time in history, the workforce isn’t made up solely of humans. Today, we have a new class of workers: digital labor, powered by agentic AI. And while many of us will enjoy a day off, these digital agents will work tirelessly behind the scenes, running thousands of supply chain scenarios without breaking a sweat.
When I began my career more than two decades ago, the idea of digital labor was pure science fiction. Supply chains relied heavily on spreadsheets, manual processes, and long nights of human effort.
Fast forward to today, and the situation looks very different. We can now introduce “light-touch automation” with agentic AI into supply chain planning. These agents don’t take over; they assist, analyze, recommend, and continuously optimize, allowing humans to focus on judgment, creativity, and relationships.
At ketteQ, we’re leaning into this shift by extending Salesforce’s Agentforce™ AI into supply chain planning. Salesforce has built a robust multi-cloud ecosystem, including Sales, Service, Commerce, Marketing, and Data Clouds, but supply chain intelligence has long been missing. That’s where ketteQ comes in. By connecting ERP-driven supply chain data into Salesforce and equipping Agentforce with context, we enable digital labor to operate like a human supply chain planner.
The world’s supply chains are under more strain than ever: tariffs, geopolitical tensions, inflationary pressures, and unexpected disruptions have become the norm. Human effort alone can’t keep pace. We need a new category of labor; one that never sleeps, doesn’t need a holiday, and can explore scenarios at a scale no human team could achieve.
That’s where digital labor comes in. Agents powered by ketteQ’s PolymatiQ™ Agentic AI engine run simulations across thousands of possible futures in minutes. They balance inventory, cost, service levels, and risk to surface insights right inside Salesforce objects that sales, service, and operations teams already use.
This is the essence of multi-cloud value: connecting the front office to the back office so everyone works from the same playbook. For sales and service teams, that means promise dates customers can count on. It means better alignment of supply, demand, and capacity for operations. And for the business, it means more revenue, substantial margins, and better customer experiences.
Of course, whenever we talk about automation, there’s an underlying fear: Will machines replace people?
My perspective is shaped by decades of watching technology change industries: the most powerful outcomes come when humans and machines collaborate, not compete. Digital labor isn’t here to push humans aside. It’s here to take on the heavy lifting and the endless calculations that bog us down. Humans still bring context, creativity, empathy, and the ability to weigh nuances no algorithm can capture.
In the U.S. Coast Guard, where I served earlier in my career, teamwork was everything. No single person could accomplish a mission alone. The same holds true in business. Supply Chain Agents are the kind of teammates who never tire, never ask for a break, and are always ready with fresh insights. But it’s still humans who set the direction, provide the wisdom, and build the relationships that ultimately drive success
The future of supply chain labor won’t be defined by either/or — human or digital. It will be determined by both/and. Humans working alongside intelligent agents. Strategy shaped by experience and judgment, executed at scale by tireless digital collaborators.
That’s the workforce of the future, and it’s already here.
So, as we celebrate this Labor Day, let’s raise a glass (or a burger) not only to the workers who built our world, but also to the digital labor that’s helping ensure supply chains are ready for the unpredictability of tomorrow.
To learn more about digital labor in supply chain planning, check out our AI Innovation Guide: From Predictive to Generative to Agentic AI in Supply Chain.