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Sean Powers has built his career by combining practical experience with a broad understanding of how businesses operate.
Based near Chicago, he has worked across pipeline operations, manufacturing, international sourcing, and sales, developing a reputation for solving complex challenges through collaboration, strong processes, and disciplined execution. His experience across multiple industries has given him a unique perspective on the connections between operations, supplier relationships, and long-term business success.
Rather than following a traditional career path, Sean embraced opportunities to learn from different industries and environments. Each role expanded his understanding of business and reinforced the importance of adaptability, communication, and continuous improvement. He believes that lasting success is built through consistent execution rather than quick wins, and that strong relationships often create more value than short-term transactions.
Throughout his career, Sean has focused on helping organisations improve efficiency while keeping people at the centre of every decision. His work has strengthened his belief that operational thinking leads to better business outcomes because it encourages leaders to consider the wider impact of every decision, not just the immediate result.
Today, Sean shares insights drawn from years of hands-on experience in operations, sourcing, manufacturing, and business development. He writes about leadership, supply chain management, operational excellence, and professional growth, offering practical perspectives shaped by real-world experience rather than theory. His thoughtful approach and commitment to continuous learning have established him as a respected voice for businesses seeking sustainable growth through stronger systems, better communication, and lasting partnerships.
Q: Your career has taken you through pipeline operations, manufacturing, international sourcing and sales. How did that journey begin?
Sean Powers: Looking back, my career probably wasn’t as carefully planned as people might think. I didn’t set out with the goal of working across several industries. I simply focused on taking opportunities where I could learn and contribute. Each role introduced me to a different side of business, and each one taught me something I still use today.
Working in pipeline operations taught me the importance of planning and discipline because there isn’t much room for error. Manufacturing showed me how every process is connected, while international sourcing introduced me to the complexity of supplier relationships and global logistics. Sales added another perspective by reminding me that every operational decision eventually affects the customer.
Over time, those experiences started fitting together in ways I hadn’t expected.
Q: Was there a moment when you realised working across different industries had become one of your greatest strengths?
Sean Powers: I think it happened gradually rather than all at once. Early in my career, I sometimes wondered if moving between industries meant I was missing the chance to become a specialist. Eventually, I realised the opposite was happening.
The broader my experience became, the easier it was to recognise patterns. Every industry has its own terminology and challenges, but many of the underlying issues are surprisingly similar. Communication breaks down. Processes become inefficient. Teams lose sight of the bigger picture.
Because I’d seen those situations in different environments, I found myself approaching problems from several angles instead of looking for one obvious solution.
Q: How has your experience in operations influenced the way you make business decisions today?
Sean Powers: Operations changes the way you think because it teaches you that almost every decision has a ripple effect.
A sourcing decision doesn’t only affect procurement. It influences manufacturing schedules, inventory, logistics and eventually customer expectations. Once you’ve seen those connections enough times, you naturally begin asking different questions before making decisions.
Instead of focusing only on the immediate issue, I try to understand how today’s decision will affect the business six months from now. That shift in perspective has probably been one of the biggest lessons of my career.
Q: You’ve written about asking better questions. Why has that become such an important philosophy for you?
Sean Powers: Earlier in my career, I thought experience meant having answers. Today, I think experience is often about asking better questions.
I’ve learned that the first explanation for a problem is rarely the complete one. If a shipment is delayed or production falls behind, there’s usually more happening than what’s immediately visible. Taking the time to understand why something happened often leads to a much better solution than reacting to the first symptom you see.
I’ve also found that asking thoughtful questions builds stronger relationships. People are more willing to share information when they feel someone is genuinely trying to understand the situation rather than simply assign blame.
Q: International sourcing has changed significantly over recent years. What stands out to you most?
Sean Powers: I think businesses have become much more aware of resilience.
There was a time when conversations centred almost entirely around cost and efficiency. Those factors still matter, but companies are now thinking more carefully about supplier relationships, diversification and long-term reliability.
I’ve always believed relationships play a much bigger role than many people realise. Contracts establish expectations, but trust is what helps organisations navigate unexpected challenges. The strongest partnerships I’ve seen were built long before problems ever appeared.
Q: You’ve worked with many different teams throughout your career. What separates the strongest ones?
Sean Powers: Communication.
That probably sounds simple, but I’ve seen incredibly talented teams struggle because information wasn’t shared clearly. I’ve also seen average teams accomplish remarkable things because everyone understood the objective and trusted each other.
The strongest teams aren’t necessarily the ones with the smartest individuals. They’re the ones where people communicate openly, listen to different perspectives and focus on solving problems together instead of protecting their own department.
Those qualities become even more important as organisations grow.
Q: Has your leadership style changed over the years?
Sean Powers: Absolutely.
When I was younger, I probably felt I needed to solve every problem myself. Experience has taught me that leadership isn’t about having every answer.
It’s about creating an environment where people feel comfortable sharing ideas, asking questions and working through challenges together.
I’ve become much more comfortable saying, “Let’s understand the situation first.” Slowing down long enough to gather different perspectives often leads to much stronger decisions than rushing to appear decisive.
Q: What advice would you offer someone building a career in business today?
Sean Powers: Stay curious and don’t worry if your career doesn’t follow a perfectly straight line.
Some of the most valuable lessons I’ve learned came from opportunities I never planned for. Every industry taught me something different, and every role expanded the way I think about business.
I’d also encourage people to focus on relationships as much as technical knowledge. Skills will always matter, but people remember how you communicate, whether you follow through on your commitments and how you respond when things become difficult.
Looking back, those qualities have probably had a greater influence on my career than any single technical skill. Experience isn’t simply about accumulating knowledge. It’s about learning how to connect people, processes and ideas in a way that helps everyone move forward together.



