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How a Meta supply chain lead cashed in at the 2024 World Series of Poker

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How a Meta supply chain lead cashed in at the 2024 World Series of Poker

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More than 10,000 players traveled to Las Vegas this past July to compete in the Main Event of the 2024 World Series of Poker. Jordan Griff, a business insights lead for supply chain planning at Meta, was just one of them — at least at the start.

Over the course of 12 days and more than 90 hours of play, Griff ended up taking home $6 million as the tournament’s runner-up, outlasting a field chock full of poker professionals and fellow amateurs to etch his name in the sport’s history.

Griff’s poker career didn’t start this past summer, however. In fact, the former supply chain analyst and strategy manager at PepsiCo.’s rise in the poker world has run parallel to his journey in supply chain management.

The road to the Main Event

The New York native attended Arizona State University to, as he puts it, get away from the cold, earning his bachelor’s degree in supply chain management and marketing in 2016 before joining Pepsi. His attraction to the profession, particularly procurement, started with his childhood fascination with buying and selling sports cards, video games and anything else he could get his hands on.

After college, Griff moved to Illinois and then New York over a nearly five-year run with Pepsi, most recently serving as strategy associate manager of supply chain NPI until 2021.

Eventually, Griff sought a new challenge beyond the more established supply chain of the beverage giant. That led him to the technology sector, specifically Meta. When he joined what was then Facebook in its Reality Labs division — the unit responsible for the company’s virtual and augmented reality products — in 2021, Griff found himself working with “a much newer supply chain.”

“It wasn’t as easy to say the forecast at this point in time was the issue, or the supply at this point in time was an issue,” Griff told Supply Chain Dive in an interview. “So there’s a lot of longer range planning that goes on, and a lot of assumptions, as opposed to clear cut data.”

Joining Meta brought Griff to the Bay Area and eventually back to Arizona. As he moved across the country, he continued to pursue his passion for poker, playing as much as once a week depending on how close he was to a casino.

“[I] kept being able to move up in stakes and be profitable and get to a point where I felt confident playing the main event and felt that, you know, I had a chance to do well,” Griff said.

Griff said he had previously won money in a World Series circuit event when he was living in Illinois. Then, last year, he made the final table — the last group of players left in a tournament — at another circuit event in San Jose, California.


“[I] kept being able to move up in stakes and be profitable and get to a point where I felt confident playing the main event and felt that, you know, I had a chance to do well.”

Jordan Griff

Business Insights Lead (Supply Chain Planning), Meta


As he made a name for himself at the circuit level, Griff entered his first Main Event in 2022. He only lasted about four hours, getting bounced by a three of a kind. But he came back the next year and lasted two days.

“I felt like I was playing really well and got good table draws, where I’m like, I definitely have an edge against these guys, and I should be playing this,” Griff said.

From surviving to thriving

Griff returned this summer and made it a whole lot further than two days, playing all the way to the very end. The tournament, which was spread over 12 days for Griff, is a grueling marathon. Most playing days go from about 12 p.m. to 12 a.m., with 15-minute breaks every two hours and a 75-minute break for dinner, according to Griff.

To compete at a high level over such a long period of time each day, Griff remained focused on his strategy, regardless of the ebbs and flows of his chip count.

“I usually play a pretty aggressive style, and I like to be betting, and like to be in control of the pots,” Griff said. “I like to try and control the dynamics of the game if I can.”

In many ways, some of the skills Griff utilizes in his day job aid him at the poker table. He says he adjusts his game to how the table is playing to ensure he understands the dynamics working for and against him.

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