
- Sponsor
- Industrial & Enterprise Systems Engineering Department, University of Illinois
- Contact
- Julie Murphy
- jdg5@illinois.edu
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- 1
Andy Williams is an ISE alumnus whose work focuses on how complex systems actually lead to decisions—and how engineers can design those systems responsibly.
Andy earned his B.S. in Industrial Engineering with a focus on operations research, supply chain, and human factors. Like many IE students, he was drawn to engineering not because of machines or structures, but because he wanted to improve how systems work—especially when people, information, and tradeoffs are involved. Early in his career, he worked at a supply chain software company designing and implementing large-scale warehouse management systems, where clean models quickly encountered real-world constraints.
Andy returned to the University of Illinois to earn his M.S. in General Engineering (now Systems and Entrepreneurial Engineering), where systems thinking, interdisciplinary problem-solving, and decision-making under uncertainty became central to his work.
Over the past 20 years, his career has spanned analytics, consulting, and commercial strategy roles across life sciences, animal health, and industrial sectors. In these roles, Andy led and supported large-scale transformation initiatives—designing analytics systems, shaping how insights and options are presented to leaders, and improving how organizations align incentives, information, and action. His work has included the use of advanced analytics and AI as decision-support tools, accelerating insight while preserving human judgment and accountability as decisions move through real organizations.
Today, Andy works as a consultant and executive coach, helping leaders design decision-making environments in complex, human-centered systems. As a two-time graduate of this department, he has seen firsthand how Industrial and Systems Engineering graduates learn to operate at the intersection of technical rigor, human judgment, and real-world constraints—and how those strengths prepare them to take responsibility for complex decisions long before they hold formal authority.