Authored by: Mr. Sunil Kumar
India’s logistics sector is expanding rapidly, powered by e-commerce growth, modern infrastructure, the National Logistics Policy and increasing multimodal connectivity. But as the industry evolves, a noticeable skill gap has emerged. Companies struggle to find professionals who understand today’s digitally driven logistics landscape. Roles that once depended on manual coordination now require comfort with data, automation and end-to-end supply chain visibility.
This mismatch between industry expectations and available talent is one of the biggest challenges the sector faces today—and higher education has a major role in closing it.
1. Updating Curriculum to Match Real-World Needs
Many logistics and supply chain programmes still rely heavily on traditional subjects—basic transportation, procurement theory, warehouse fundamentals. While these remain important, the industry needs graduates who understand how modern logistics actually works.
Colleges can address this by integrating newer topics into their courses, such as:
i. Digital freight platforms and transport/warehouse management systems
ii. Logistics and supply chain analytics
iii. Multimodal and intermodal operations
iv. Trade compliance and cross-border documentation
v. Sustainable logistics practices
vi. Automation, robotics and warehouse digitisation
A curriculum built around current industry practices allows students to step into real roles without needing months of retraining.
2. Strengthening Collaboration with Industry
Because logistics evolves quickly, academia cannot work in isolation. Strong, continuous industry-academia partnerships help ensure learning remains relevant.
This collaboration can include:
i. Guest lectures from logistics leaders
ii. Jointly designed modules and certifications
iii. Regular curriculum reviews with industry advisors
iv. Case studies based on actual business challenges
Such interactions help students gain exposure to day-to-day supply chain issues instead of only textbook understanding.
3. Creating More Hands-On Learning Opportunities
Logistics is an execution-driven field. Students learn best when they can see real operations at work. Institutions can bring practical exposure into their teaching through:
i. Internships with freight forwarders, 3PLs, ports and warehousing companies
ii. Live projects focused on route planning, freight optimisation or cost reduction
iii. Field visits to logistics parks, distribution centres and container terminals
iv. Simulation labs that replicate warehouse or supply chain scenarios
These experiences help students build confidence, understand decision-making and sharpen problem-solving skills.
4. Emphasising Tech Skills for the Future
The logistics industry is becoming increasingly technology-first. Fleet IoT devices, automated warehousing, predictive analytics and digital freight booking systems are becoming standard tools. Students entering the sector must therefore be comfortable with basic technology use and data interpretation.
Higher education programmes can strengthen tech skills by teaching:
i. Data analysis, dashboards and basic forecasting
ii. Use of TMS/WMS and other digital freight tools
iii. Basics of AI, IoT and automation in logistics
iv. Exposure to ERP systems and supply chain software
Even introductory knowledge of these systems gives students an advantage in a sector where digital fluency is now essential.
5. Offering Focused Upskilling for Working Professionals
A significant part of the logistics workforce is already employed but needs structured upskilling. Institutions can support them with:
i. Short-term certification programmes
ii. Online or hybrid courses for flexible learning
iii. Executive education for mid-level managers
iv. Workshops on the latest supply chain technologies
This continuous learning approach ensures the existing workforce grows alongside new graduates.
6. Encouraging Research and Innovation
India’s logistics landscape is unique, with challenges such as fragmented networks, varying regional infrastructure and complex trade systems. Higher education can help create solutions by promoting research and innovation through:
i. Supply chain labs and innovation centres
ii. Applied research projects
iii. Competitions on real logistics problems
iv. Collaboration between faculty, students and logistics companies
Such initiatives push students to think creatively and address practical industry issues.
7. Building Soft Skills Along with Technical Knowledge
While technical skills are essential, logistics also demands strong communication, teamwork and crisis management. The best logistics professionals are those who can coordinate, negotiate, handle pressure and solve problems quickly.
Colleges can strengthen this by integrating training in:
i. Communication and presentation
ii. Leadership and team dynamics
iii. Analytical thinking
iv. Customer management
These skills help students adapt faster once they enter the industry.
Conclusion
India’s logistics skill gap is not just an HR concern—it is a structural challenge that can slow the growth of an entire sector. But it is also an opportunity. Higher education institutions can play a pivotal role by modernising their curriculum, deepening industry partnerships, and giving students real exposure to today’s tech-enabled logistics environment.
With the right academic support, India can build a future-ready logistics workforce—one that is skilled, adaptable and capable of supporting the country’s ambitions to become a global supply chain hub.
Authored by: Mr. Sunil Kumar, CEO Everfast Freight Forwarders (P) LTD
