MIDWAY, GA / ACCESS Newswire / December 12, 2025 / Shawn Miles, founder of OPtiM Consulting Group LLC, aims to connect with clients who recognize their operational problems and seek expert guidance. To address this, he is building an Operational Readiness and Resiliency Assessment tool designed to diagnose client operations and deliver prioritized action plans. The tool integrates safety protocols, operational efficiency, and KPI assessments, and includes ROI projections to demonstrate clear value. Miles' focus is on genuine value creation, deliberately rejecting clients and projects where meaningful improvement cannot be achieved.

Credit: OPtiM Consulting Group, Caption: OptiM Consulting Group
In the world of supply chain consulting, credentials often serve as the currency of credibility. Ivy League diplomas and polished corporate pedigrees dominate the landscape. Yet some of the most effective leaders emerge from paths far removed from academia's ivory towers, where authority is forged not in lecture halls, but in the unforgiving trenches of real-world operations.

Credit: Shawn Miles, Caption: Shawn Miles
Such is the journey of Shawn Miles, founder of OPtiM Consulting Group LLC, whose career challenges conventional wisdom about expertise and leadership. His story demonstrates that the deepest operational knowledge is often earned not through theory and systems alone, but through years spent navigating complexity firsthand.
Miles' path began with an early escape from small-town limits. At seventeen, he left high school and enlisted in the United States Navy, viewing military service as a gateway to opportunity and broader horizons. Following an honorable discharge in 1992, he transitioned directly into logistics operations, working across eastern ports and manufacturing facilities. These environments would become his classroom for more than a decade, shaping his understanding of supply chains at their most physical and demanding levels.
Leadership came naturally. Raised by his grandparents, Miles inherited a strong work ethic early on, one reinforced by the structure, discipline, and resilience instilled during his naval service. Wherever he went, organizations quickly recognized his capability. Within months, he was often entrusted with supervisory and management responsibilities, leading teams and overseeing operations under pressure. Yet despite consistent results, he repeatedly encountered what he describes as the glass ceiling, an invisible barrier that limited advancement into executive leadership despite proven performance.
A defining turning point arrived in 2001 with a catastrophic accident, a fall from a container ship that resulted in a year-long rehabilitation. Physically unable to continue the grueling demands of maritime work, Miles faced the uncertainty of reinvention. Rather than stepping away from the industry, he pivoted. He enrolled in Georgia Southern University's logistics program, then ranked among the top ten in the nation. With renewed focus and clarity of purpose, he completed the four-year degree in just three years by maximizing course load and maintaining relentless discipline. The academic experience did not replace his operational instincts. It refined them.
His subsequent career with organizations such as Exel, later DHL, revealed a rare talent for operational turnaround. While multiple startup facilities struggled to meet expectations, Miles' operation consistently stood out as the lone success, delivering on time, under budget, and ahead of performance benchmarks. Under his leadership, teams met or exceeded every KPI tied to distribution performance. His approach was deceptively simple: closely watch the numbers, understand what they are truly signaling, and lead decisively rather than merely participate. That philosophy became the foundation of a career spent optimizing distribution networks across leading third-party logistics providers and privately held companies spanning multiple sectors and business models.
Despite his success, Miles initially resisted consulting altogether. He viewed the profession with skepticism, believing it often lacked meaningful impact. In his experience, consultants relied too heavily on recycled data and polished presentations, offering diagnoses without practical solutions. It was only after persistent encouragement from a colleague that he joined RGP as a consultant, where he quickly rose into a managing consultant role. There, his hands-on, operator-driven approach helped generate more than $17 million in client revenue within four years, while also producing over $34 million in realized savings across client logistics networks. More importantly, the role helped crystallize his true calling, not simply identifying problems, but fixing them.
That realization led to the creation of OPtiM Consulting Group, a firm built on a deliberately uncommon premise. Consultants should be seasoned operators, not just analysts and advisors. Miles prioritizes professionals with decades of hands-on experience managing labor, safety, systems, and scale in real operational environments. The difference, he argues, is not theoretical. It is measurable.
One client engagement illustrates this distinction clearly. A company believed it had lost $1 million in inventory and initially suspected theft or shrinkage. Miles uncovered a different truth. The organization had scaled from $50 million to $500 million in revenue without modernizing its systems. Inventory was not missing. It was being artificially created through procedural gaps. By working directly with the client's WMS provider and implementing proper bin-location management, the phantom losses disappeared. As a secondary benefit, labor costs declined significantly, and the resulting savings exceeded more than twice the investment required for the corrective measures.
While immediate results remain essential, Miles' vision extends beyond short-term fixes. OPtiM Consulting Group is scaling with a focus on valuing experience while remaining agile enough to address a wide range of supply chain challenges. Central to this growth is the Operational Resiliency Assessment, a comprehensive evaluation that moves beyond standard KPIs to examine safety protocols, process efficiency, systemic vulnerabilities, and cost-reduction opportunities. Designed to deliver rapid ROI, the assessment provides clients with a prioritized roadmap and, when appropriate, hands-on partnership to drive lasting change.
Underlying all of this is a leadership philosophy rooted in connection. Over more than three decades, Miles has led countless teams and maintained long-term relationships with the people he has worked alongside. That commitment, shaped by values instilled by his grandparents and great uncle, reflects a belief that leadership responsibility does not end when a project closes.
In an industry increasingly dominated by analytics and theoretical models, Miles offers a critical counterbalance. His ability to walk into any facility and uncover meaningful savings stems not solely from spreadsheets, but from decades of knowing how work actually gets done under pressure. Most organizations recognize they have problems, and some even understand where those problems lie. The challenge, as Miles sees it, is identifying the true root cause and charting a path that actually fixes it.
Shawn Miles' journey from Navy veteran to supply chain strategist underscores a timeless truth. The most valuable expertise is forged through lived experience. The man who once stood watch on naval decks now guides corporations through equally turbulent operational waters, demonstrating that the most powerful education is often not found in classrooms, but in the challenges endured and overcome.
Media Contact:
Name: Shawn Miles
Email: info@optimconsultinggroup.com
SOURCE: OPtiM Consulting Group LLC
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