How defence organisations can modernise digital supply chains by adopting AI
Guest blog by CACI #SupplyChainSecurity
Defence organisations rely on vast, interconnected digital supply chains that span industries, national boundaries and decades of operational life. These supply chains are fundamental to maintaining availability, readiness and resilience, yet many remain constrained by legacy platforms, fragmented data and processes designed for a very different pace of technological change.
At the same time, geopolitical uncertainty, accelerating technology cycles and evolving cyber threats are increasing pressure on organisations to respond more quickly and with greater foresight. Traditional approaches to managing obsolescence, risk and availability are increasingly stretched, particularly where components become obsolete faster than procurement cycles can adapt, data remains siloed across suppliers and platforms, and complex processes slow coordination and decision‑making.
The result is a growing tension: supply chains are expected to support modern capability, while still relying on systems and structures rooted in the past.
Why more data alone is not enough
Over the past decade, many defence organisations have invested heavily in data platforms and analytics to improve visibility and control. While these investments have delivered value, many leaders now recognise a familiar paradox: more data does not always translate into clearer decisions.
Data can highlight patterns and trends, but without sufficient context it rarely explains what those trends mean in practice or what actions can be taken safely. Understanding impact, dependencies and trade‑offs across complex supply chains requires more than analytics alone. It requires structure.
This is where artificial intelligence has the potential to add value, but only when it is grounded in a clear understanding of how systems, processes and supplier relationships fit together.
Key considerations before introducing AI
In defence environments, existing systems and platforms cannot be replaced overnight, nor should they be. AI is most effective when used to augment what already works, rather than attempting wholesale transformation.
Before adopting AI within digital supply chains, organisations should take time to consider:
- Purpose – clearly defining the operational or decision‑making problems AI is being used to address
- Foundations – ensuring data governance, security, interoperability and semantic consistency are in place
- Operating model – understanding how AI will be monitored, governed and sustained over time
Taken together, these considerations help ensure AI strengthens supply chain resilience rather than introducing new points of fragility.
A practical, incremental approach
Rather than treating AI adoption as a single step, many organisations are taking a more incremental approach, applying different levels of automation and intelligence depending on risk, maturity and value. This often involves assessing whether processes should be retained as‑is, gradually enhanced through automation, or re‑engineered where AI enables genuinely new capabilities.
Viewed this way, AI becomes a set of tools applied deliberately and proportionately, rather than a universal overlay applied indiscriminately across the supply chain.
Where AI can add value in defence supply chains
When introduced thoughtfully, AI can support a range of outcomes, including:
- Predictive obsolescence management, enabling earlier identification of emerging risks
- Improved visibility, integrating data from multiple sources to highlight bottlenecks and vulnerabilities
- Decision support at pace, surfacing insights that would otherwise take weeks to uncover
- Digital twin modelling, simulating disruption, demand shifts or supplier failure scenarios
- Enhanced cyber resilience, detecting anomalies across complex, interconnected environments
- Workforce augmentation, freeing specialists to focus on higher‑value analysis and judgement
Looking ahead
AI is not a cure‑all, but when introduced with appropriate governance and architectural discipline, it can play a meaningful role in modernising defence digital supply chains. The key is not how advanced the technology is, but how responsibly and deliberately it is applied.
Organisations that focus first on structure, context and clear decision‑making needs will be best placed to realise the benefits of AI while maintaining trust, assurance and operational continuity.
CACI works with defence organisations to explore how model‑led approaches and digital twins can support more resilient and transparent digital supply chains.
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Jill Broom
Head of Cyber Resilience, techUK
Jill leads the techUK Cyber Resilience programme, having originally joined techUK in October 2020 as a Programme Manager for the Cyber and Central Government programmes. She is responsible for managing techUK's work across the cyber security ecosystem, bringing industry together with key stakeholders across the public and private sectors. Jill also provides the industry secretariat for the Cyber Growth Partnership, the industry and government conduit for supporting the growth of the sector. A key focus of her work is to strengthen the public–private partnership across cyber to support further development of UK cyber security and resilience policy.
Before joining techUK, Jill worked as a Senior Caseworker for an MP, advocating for local communities, businesses and individuals, so she is particularly committed to techUK’s vision of harnessing the power of technology to improve people’s lives. Jill is also an experienced editorial professional and has delivered copyediting and writing services for public-body and SME clients as well as publishers.
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Annie Collings
Senior Programme Manager, Cyber Resilience, techUK
Annie is the Programme Manager for Cyber Resilience at techUK. She first joined as the Programme Manager for Cyber Security and Central Government in September 2023.
In her role, Annie supports the Cyber Security SME Forum, engaging regularly with key government and industry stakeholders to advance the growth and development of SMEs in the cyber sector. Annie also coordinates events, engages with policy makers and represents techUK at a number of cyber security events.
Before joining techUK, Annie was an Account Manager at a specialist healthcare agency, where she provided public affairs support to a wide range of medical technology clients. She also gained experience as an intern in both an MP’s constituency office and with the Association of Independent Professionals and the Self-Employed. Annie holds a degree in International Relations from Nottingham Trent University.
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Olivia Staples
Junior Programme Manager - Cyber Resilience, techUK
Olivia Staples joined techUK in May 2025 as a Junior Programme Manager in the Cyber Resilience team.
She supports the programs mission to promote cyber resilience by engaging key commercial and government stakeholders to shape the cyber resilience policy towards increased security and industry growth. Olivia assists in member engagement, event facilitation and communications support.
Before joining techUK, Olivia gained experience in research, advocacy, and strategic communications across several international organisations. At the Munich Security Conference, she supported stakeholder engagement and contributed to strategic communications. She also worked closely with local and national government stakeholders in Spain and Italy, where she was involved in policy monitoring and advocacy for both public and private sector clients.
Olivia holds an MSc in Political Science (Comparative Politics and Conflict Studies) from the London School of Economics (LSE) and a BA in Spanish and Latin American Studies from University College London (UCL).
Outside of tech, Olivia enjoys volunteering with local charities and learning Norwegian.
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