Supply chain interviews assess both technical knowledge (inventory, logistics, demand planning) and the softer capabilities that make the difference in a complex, cross-functional role: relationship management, analytical thinking, resilience under supply disruption, and the ability to communicate with commercial and operational stakeholders who may have conflicting priorities.

What interviewers assess

Supply chain concept questions

"What's the difference between MRP and MRP II?" MRP (Material Requirements Planning) focuses on what materials are needed and when, based on the production schedule and BOM (bill of materials). MRP II (Manufacturing Resource Planning) extends this to include capacity planning, labour, and financial planning — a more integrated business planning tool.

"Explain safety stock and how you'd calculate it." Safety stock is inventory held as a buffer against demand variability and supply lead time uncertainty. A basic formula: Safety Stock = Z × σ_d × √L, where Z is the service level factor (from standard normal distribution), σ_d is demand standard deviation, and L is lead time. In practice, the approach depends on data quality and the business's service level targets.

"What is the bullwhip effect?" The amplification of demand variability as you move upstream in the supply chain. Small demand fluctuations at the retail level become large order fluctuations at the manufacturer level because each tier responds to perceived variability by building buffer. Root causes: order batching, demand forecast overreaction, price promotions causing artificial spikes.

"What's the trade-off between JIT and holding higher inventory?" JIT minimises inventory cost and waste but is vulnerable to supply disruption. Higher inventory provides resilience but increases holding cost (capital, storage, obsolescence risk). The right balance depends on supply reliability, demand predictability, product margins, and shelf life.

Supplier and procurement questions

"How do you manage a supplier who is consistently underperforming?" Start with data: establish what the performance gap is and document it. Engage the supplier directly — raise the issue formally, agree a corrective action plan with clear timelines and metrics. Develop contingency (alternative supplier or safety stock) in parallel so you're not held hostage to the relationship. Escalate or exit if performance doesn't improve.

"Tell me about a negotiation you've led with a supplier." STAR format. What was the objective? What was your preparation (market benchmarks, alternatives, the supplier's perspective)? What tactics did you use? What was the outcome in commercial terms? Show you understand that good supplier negotiations create a deal both sides can sustain, not just that you squeezed maximum value short-term.

Problem-solving and disruption questions

"A key supplier has just told you they can't deliver a critical component for six weeks. What do you do?" Immediate triage: impact assessment — what production or fulfilment is affected? Stakeholder communication — commercial, operations, and finance need to know. Parallel workstreams: find alternative suppliers, assess expediting options (airfreight), review what can be built or shipped without the component, consider customer impact and prioritisation.

"How would you respond to a sudden spike in demand that exceeds your stock position?" Prioritise your most critical customers or channels, communicate lead times proactively (don't wait for customers to chase), expedite where margin justifies it, and work back through your supply chain on what can be accelerated. Post-event: review your demand signal and safety stock assumptions.

Behavioural questions

"Tell me about a time you identified a supply chain inefficiency and what you did about it." Shows analytical initiative. Walk through: how you spotted it (data, observation, customer feedback), how you quantified the impact, what you proposed, how you got buy-in, and what changed. Results should be measurable where possible.

"Describe a time you had to manage conflicting priorities from different stakeholders." Supply chain is inherently cross-functional. Show you understand each stakeholder's perspective, communicated clearly, made a principled decision about prioritisation, and managed the relationship with whoever didn't get what they wanted.

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Frequently asked questions

What qualifications are most valued in supply chain interviews?
CIPS (Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply) is the most recognised professional qualification for procurement and supply chain in the UK. APICS CSCP or CPIM are well-recognised globally, particularly for operations and planning roles. However, in many commercial supply chain roles, demonstrated experience and quantified results outweigh qualification credentials.
How important is ERP systems knowledge?
Important, but rarely a dealbreaker on its own. If the role specifically uses SAP or Oracle, experience with those systems is a real advantage. But most interviewers know ERP tools are learnable — what they're assessing is whether you understand what the systems are doing operationally. Explain how you've used systems to manage planning, inventory, or supplier data rather than just listing them.
How do I talk about supply chain disruptions like COVID-19 in an interview?
Use it as context, not as an excuse. If you managed through a period of major supply disruption, describe what you personally did: what decisions you made, what you escalated, what you changed in processes afterwards. The most compelling answers show that disruption revealed something about your supply chain that you then fixed. Passive descriptions of being affected by disruption are less compelling than active accounts of responding to it.