Agentic AI pilots in life sciences and healthcare supply chains often fail because agents only have access to a fraction of the data they need. Most companies are integrated with only 5–10% of their partners, while the rest of the work happens through emails, spreadsheets, and manual updates—leaving large portions of order and shipment activity outside the systems AI can use.
In this video series, Jerry Meyer, VP of Product Development at TraceLink, explains how TraceLink addresses this challenge with its Integrate-Once™, Interoperate-with-Everyone™ capability. Instead of building separate, costly integrations for each partner, companies link to the TraceLink network once, use their preferred data formats, and exchange purchase orders, order confirmations, shipment notices, inventory updates, and much more with all partners—with 100% interoperability.
Powered by end-to-end supply chain data, agentic supply chain agents—configured with defined roles and permissions—work alongside human teams to review purchase orders, flag discrepancies, initiate follow-ups with partners, and carry out approved actions. Teams stay in control while agents handle routine checks and coordination, helping resolve issues earlier and keep shipments on track. Watch the full series to see how TraceLink is enabling agentic supply chains to operate at real-world scale.

Why Do Many AI Pilots Fail in Pharmaceutical Supply Chains?

Why Are GxP Compliance and Validation Essential for Software in Life Sciences?

Why Is Human Oversight Critical for Supply Chain Agents?

Why Is Integrate-Once™ Critical for Enabling Agentic Supply Chains?

What Can Supply Chain Agents Accomplish When Data and Processes Are Unified?

How Can AI Agents Help Organizations Grow Despite Hiring Challenges?

What New Agentic Capabilities Is TraceLink Bringing to Market?

How Is TraceLink Shaping the Future of Agentic Orchestration?