Customer Experience Driving Innovation for High-Performing Companies

Editor’s Note: The following is an excerpt of a research report published last week, “Competing on Customer Experience: The Driving Force Behind Supply Chain Innovation.” The research, produced by Adelante SCM and presented by BluJay Solutions (a Talking Logistics sponsor), was conducted to explore the links between supply chain management innovation, customer experience, technology adoption, and company performance. You can read and download the full report at http://www.supplychainresearch.info/ .

Is delivering an enhanced “Customer Experience” becoming a defined and measured objective within supply chain organizations?

To gain insights on that question and more, Adelante SCM and BluJay Solutions conducted a web survey of supply chain and logistics professionals in March 2018. A total of 137 respondents completed the survey from Manufacturing, Retail, Logistics Service Provider, and other companies in the Americas, EMEA, and APAC.

As part of the survey, we asked the respondents to rate their company’s supply chain performance relative to peers in their industry (ranging from “Significantly Below Average” to “Significantly Above Average”). We also asked them to characterize their company’s culture with regard to technology adoption (ranging from “Laggards” to “Innovators”). This enabled us to compare the responses between Above Average and Innovator companies with those from Below Average and Laggard companies.

Overall, two-thirds (66.4%) of the respondents reported that delivering an enhanced customer experience is a defined and measured objective within their supply chain organizations.

There are two ways to view these findings: You can either say it’s discouraging that many more companies aren’t incorporating customer experience within their supply chain performance metrics, especially as the “Amazon Effect” ripples across all industries, or you can say it’s encouraging that so many supply chain organizations are already focusing on customer experience because you had assumed the percentage would have been much lower.

Customer Experience: A Bigger Focus for High-Performing and Innovator Companies

Delivering an enhanced customer experience, however, was notably higher among Innovator/Early Adopter and Above Average Performance companies (76.6% and 76.9%, respectively), and it was lower for Laggard/Late Majority and Average/Below Average Performance companies (51.2% and 51.5%, respectively).

Chart from Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions research report
Source: “Competing on Customer Experience: The Driving Force Behind Supply Chain Innovation,” Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions, August 2018

The results were similar with regards to which factors are driving supply chain innovation at companies today. Overall, “To reduce costs” and “To deliver an enhanced customer experience” received the same percentage of top rank votes (31.4%), with “To create a competitive advantage” placing third (17.5%).

However, “To deliver an enhanced customer experience” received the most top rank votes from both Innovator/Early Adopter and Above Average Performance companies (36.2% and 37.2%, respectively). “To reduce costs” actually placed third for Innovator/Early Adopter companies (21.3%), behind “To create a competitive advantage” (25.5%).

Chart from Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions research report
Source: “Competing on Customer Experience: The Driving Force Behind Supply Chain Innovation,” Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions, August 2018

Simply put, when it comes to what’s driving supply chain innovation today, “cost reduction” is taking a backseat to “delivering an enhanced customer experience” for companies with above average supply chain performance and those that are innovators or early adopters of technology.

Logistics Service Providers Focus on Delivering Innovation

It is also interesting to note the differences between Shippers (manufacturers, retailers, and distributors) and Logistics Service Providers (LSPs) with regards to innovation driving forces. For Shippers, “To reduce costs” received the greatest percentage of top rank votes (33.7%), but for LSPs, cost reduction actually placed third (21.1%), behind “To deliver an enhanced customer experience” (31.6%) and “To create a competitive advantage” (28.9%), which received far fewer top rank votes from Shippers (14.4%).

Chart from Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions research report
Source: “Competing on Customer Experience: The Driving Force Behind Supply Chain Innovation,” Adelante SCM & BluJay Solutions, August 2018

In short, as Logistics Service Providers look for ways to differentiate themselves from the competition, they are focusing less on competing on cost (which often leads to commoditization) and focusing more on competing on delivering innovation.

Perspectives from BluJay Solutions Customers

At the BluJay Soar 2018 conference this past May, I conducted several video interviews with BluJay customers on the growing importance of customer experience. You can watch excerpts from the videos at the research website. Here are some highlights from my conversation with Brittany Neudeck from Bayer Consumer Health.

What does supply chain innovation mean to you?

“When I hear supply chain innovation I think about making your supply chain work in the most efficient way possible without jeopardizing what your customers want from you as a shipper.”

What areas of supply chain and logistics are in the most need of innovation?

“Improving shipping efficiency, having visibility to shipments, and making sure that at any time you can tell your customers where a shipment is and what its ETA [Estimated Time of Arrival] is. On Time in Full [OTIF] is a huge thing for everybody right now, so that is something we’re really focused on and making sure we’re meeting that requirement so that customers choose us [over the competition] in the future.”

Do you see outdated and fragmented IT systems as a hurdle to innovation?

“Absolutely. This is painful to admit, but we did not have any transportation management system before we went live with BluJay just a couple of years ago. So seeing the results from that [implementation] has opened our eyes to how much more we can benefit by looking at new innovations [such as AI and warehouse robotics] and the difference they can make for us as a company.”

Is customer experience a supply chain metric at your company?

“Absolutely, it’s where we line up all of our key performance indicators. All of our KPIs are coming off what our customers are asking us for. As consumers, we’re expecting everything to be faster and we’re demanding more and more from the companies we buy from. The same thing is happening in [B2B] and big retail, and so you have to be a company that can flex and change quickly so that you’re providing the best for your customers.”

What will define successful companies of tomorrow?

“The most successful companies are going to have a passion for change. Rather than shying away from change or being scared of what change could do to the organization, the most successful companies in the next few years will lean into change and feel confident enough to run with it and take risks where necessary.”

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