Cummins India Leadership Talk | Women in Manufacturing with Bonnie Fetch & Shubhankar Chatterji
In an engaging fireside chat on Women in Manufacturing, Bonnie Fetch and Shubhankar Chatterji shared personal experiences,Β ...
Executive VP & President of Operations, Cummins
Search every verified Bonnie Fetch interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. Bonnie Fetch, Executive Vice President and President of Operations at Cummins, has spoken about her career path and leadership philosophy in recent appearances. In a November 2025 fireside chat on women in manufacturing, Fetch said she initially avoided manufacturing because her father and grandfather, both welders at Caterpillar, experienced inconsistent work during the 1980s. She stated that she later found she enjoyed logistics because of the daily variety and the people. Fetch described herself as a "people leader" rather than a supply chain or HR leader, and said that the higher one rises in leadership, the more emotional intelligence matters over technical expertise. She also said that she wrote a book titled "Unmasking the Issues: A Guide for Well-Intentioned Men in Today's Workplace" to help men become aware of gender inclusion issues. Fetch has discussed supply chain trends and the use of technology at Cummins. She stated that artificial intelligence and machine learning will help analyze supply chain data to identify trends, and that she encourages her organization to "disrupt yourself before you get disrupted." Fetch said that global supply chains will move toward more regional structures due to trade and logistics challenges, and that Cummins has been moving to a regional structure. She noted that the company is investing in technologies such as collaborative robots, 3D printing for prototyping and low-volume legacy parts, and predictive logistics using sensor data and telematics. Fetch also said that the more diverse and inclusive a team is, the better the decisions and business returns, calling inclusion "not only the right thing to do but also the smart thing to do from a business perspective."
“I actually never wanted to be in manufacturing... When I landed in logistics what I liked about it was the variety β there's something happening every day β and the people. At the end of every day you understood whether you did a good job or not, and I loved that.”
“When I went to the UK to run a transmission business people would say 'what are you over here for, your husband's job?' and 'you don't look like an MD.' On the shop floor they'd give me nicknames like 'the queen' or 'the flower,' but over time they grew to respect me.”
“Women can probably resonate with being interrupted a lot β I would stand up for myself and say, 'Can I finish?' Sometimes having a male ally who will say, 'Let her finish,' makes others stop and listen.”
“We might think we're in the engine business, but we are in the people business β to be a plant manager you need the ability to lead and inspire people, problemβsolve and make the complex simple, communicate across levels, and manage conflict; the technical things can be learned.”
In an engaging fireside chat on Women in Manufacturing, Bonnie Fetch and Shubhankar Chatterji shared personal experiences,Β ...
Throughout her career, Bonnie Fetch has worn her share of hats - including her current one as Vice President, Supply Chain atΒ ...
... new episode of well podcast episode in the link LinkedIn live episode today we're having with us Bonnie fetch um who is joiningΒ ...
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