The system is getting faster. But the decisions are getting riskier.
Behind the push for automation in freight and customs lies a tension few are willing to confront: speed is increasing, but accountability hasn’t disappeared. When something goes wrong, someone still carries the consequence. And right now, nobody has clearly defined who that is.
This conversation exposes the reality professionals experience daily but rarely articulate. The pressure to be perfect. The frustration when systems fail. The expectation to know everything in an industry where that’s impossible. Add to that a shrinking talent pipeline, fewer young brokers entering the field while complexity continues to grow and the cracks begin to show.
What emerges is a deeper truth about modern operations: efficiency doesn’t remove responsibility, it intensifies it. The more we rely on systems, the more dangerous blind trust becomes. And the cost of getting it wrong isn’t just financial, it’s reputational, legal, and personal.
This episode forces a confrontation with what’s really happening beneath the surface of global trade. Not the processes. Not the technology. But the human decisions holding it all together.
And one question remains unresolved: if the system keeps accelerating… who’s actually in control?
Chapters:
00:00 - Stephen’s background: from PE & English teacher to customs broker
02:04 - Completing the customs licensing course without hands-on classification experience
03:21 - Stephen’s transition from police force to customs classification
05:06 - Skills crossover: detective work and customs broking
06:37 - Navigating disputes: DDP shipments and liability
09:22 - The future of AI in customs: data entry vs. decision-making
11:16 - Industry demographic concerns: aging brokers and succession planning
13:13 - Effective communication and written skills in freight forwarding
14:23 - The role of AI in operational efficiency and maintaining human expertise
16:46 - Management insights: leading diverse teams and managing stress
19:48 - Career development: courses, mentorship, and personal growth
23:43 - Traits of a successful customs broker: attention to detail and professionalism
32:52 - Handling challenging questions and complex situations
37:17 - Industry resources and formal training opportunities
50:18 - The importance of curiosity and questioning in the industry
52:39 - Reflection on the sink-or-swim training approach in Australia compared to Europe
62:30 - Personal development: self-awareness, managing stress, and continuous learning
67:37 - Future of customs brokers: AI’s role and maintaining human interaction
71:23 - Caution with AI: importance of verification and reliable sources
73:56 - Final thoughts and appreciation for industry resilience and innovation