Under pressure to keep up with Amazon.com Inc. on free overnight shipping, retailers are increasingly turning to third-party logistics providers (3PLs) in an effort to compete through flexible pricing and creative marketing, according to a survey by consultancy Retail Systems Research (RSR) and Canadian IT giant Descartes Systems Group Inc.
In an effort to measure retailers' home-delivery processes and concerns, the survey polled 83 retailers and then compared their responses with those of 1,015 consumers that measured buyers' expectations for shopping and delivery. The survey found that an "Amazon Effect" now in place for about 15 years has conditioned shoppers to expect speedy home delivery without paying a premium—or, in fact, anything—for the expedited shipping.
Until the 1990s, swift home delivery was generally offered only to buyers of big-ticket items like furniture and large appliances. Everyone else paid a hefty shipping and handling fee, then waited four to six weeks for the package to arrive in the mail. But since 2000, Amazon and other large e-commerce companies have expanded their market share by offering home delivery, next-day service, and easy returns, even when the high cost of those services means they often run their retail operations at a net loss, according to RSR.
Most small and midsize retailers don't have the resources to play that game, but they still have to satisfy customers who now expect free overnight service, RSR managing partners Nikki Baird and Paula Rosenblum write in the report, "Home Delivery: Retailers' Brave New World." As a result, many retailers now find themselves in an unfamiliar place—the home delivery business—and are desperate to identify the best processes to manage e-commerce and omnichannel fulfillment demands. Turning to logistics service providers (LSPs) and 3PLs is a smart way to outsource this task to experts, Baird and Rosenblum say.
Asked about their preferred methods of delivering products to consumers, 54 percent said they shipped from DC directly to consumers using an LSP; 38 percent said that consumers picked up items at the store; 30 percent shipped from stores using parcel carriers; and 26 percent used their own or dedicated truck fleets, according to the survey.
Many retailers plan to hand off responsibility for consumer home deliveries to their vendor partners, despite being competitors with those firms in an age where vendors increasingly sell direct to consumers. About 72 percent said they expect during the next three years to increase their use of "drop-shipping," a practice where a retailer does not hold inventory but instead transfers orders and shipment details to a manufacturer, another retailer, or a wholesaler, who then ships the goods to the customer. About one-quarter said their drop-shipping activity would remain the same, while 4 percent said it would decline.
Many retailers also offer shoppers such services as product assembly, in-home installation, and removal of packaging and old products. However, the survey showed that these initiatives miss the mark of what consumers really want: low prices and convenient delivery.
That sounds simple, but the survey results also exposed a gap between customer desires for fast home delivery and willingness to pay for it. Many retailers are fearful of losing customers by boosting shipping fees, but RSR suggested a different approach. Through clever marketing, companies could offer discounts for consumers who choose slower shipping or wider delivery windows, and charge the full rate for "standard" overnight fulfillment.
The survey found that that both retailers and shoppers see room for improvement in 3PL performance. Technology investments by retailers could address those issues, allowing companies to improve profitability through route optimization, dynamic appointment scheduling, and real-time rerouting. Other technologies could help please customers by enabling predelivery customer notification, track and trace, and electronic proof of delivery, the survey found.
RSR conducted the survey last September and October, reaching companies ranging from revenues below $50 million to those generating more than $5 billion. Respondents' areas of responsibility ranged from executive management to supply chain and logistics/transportation. Respondents to the consumer survey also covered the full range of age, gender, and income.
To read the full report, see www.rsrresearch.com/2015/11/10/home-delivery-retailers-brave-new-world/. To see a webcast on the report, "State of Home Delivery Report 2016: Retailers' Brave New World," sponsored by Descartes Systems Group, register here. The webcast will take place at Tues., Jan. 26 at 2 p.m. EST, as RSR's Rosenblum discusses and explains the survey results with moderator Ben Ames, senior editor at DC Velocity.
"After several years of mitigating inflation, disruption, supply shocks, conflicts, and uncertainty, we are currently in a relative period of calm," John Paitek, vice president, GEP, said in a release. "But it is very much the calm before the coming storm. This report provides procurement and supply chain leaders with a prescriptive guide to weathering the gale force headwinds of protectionism, tariffs, trade wars, regulatory pressures, uncertainty, and the AI revolution that we will face in 2025."
A report from the company released today offers predictions and strategies for the upcoming year, organized into six major predictions in GEP’s “Outlook 2025: Procurement & Supply Chain.”
Advanced AI agents will play a key role in demand forecasting, risk monitoring, and supply chain optimization, shifting procurement's mandate from tactical to strategic. Companies should invest in the technology now to to streamline processes and enhance decision-making.
Expanded value metrics will drive decisions, as success will be measured by resilience, sustainability, and compliance… not just cost efficiency. Companies should communicate value beyond cost savings to stakeholders, and develop new KPIs.
Increasing regulatory demands will necessitate heightened supply chain transparency and accountability. So companies should strengthen supplier audits, adopt ESG tracking tools, and integrate compliance into strategic procurement decisions.
Widening tariffs and trade restrictions will force companies to reassess total cost of ownership (TCO) metrics to include geopolitical and environmental risks, as nearshoring and friendshoring attempt to balance resilience with cost.
Rising energy costs and regulatory demands will accelerate the shift to sustainable operations, pushing companies to invest in renewable energy and redesign supply chains to align with ESG commitments.
New tariffs could drive prices higher, just as inflation has come under control and interest rates are returning to near-zero levels. That means companies must continue to secure cost savings as their primary responsibility.
The new funding brings Amazon's total investment in Anthropic to $8 billion, while maintaining the e-commerce giant’s position as a minority investor, according to Anthropic. The partnership was launched in 2023, when Amazon invested its first $4 billion round in the firm.
Anthropic’s “Claude” family of AI assistant models is available on AWS’s Amazon Bedrock, which is a cloud-based managed service that lets companies build specialized generative AI applications by choosing from an array of foundation models (FMs) developed by AI providers like AI21 Labs, Anthropic, Cohere, Meta, Mistral AI, Stability AI, and Amazon itself.
According to Amazon, tens of thousands of customers, from startups to enterprises and government institutions, are currently running their generative AI workloads using Anthropic’s models in the AWS cloud. Those GenAI tools are powering tasks such as customer service chatbots, coding assistants, translation applications, drug discovery, engineering design, and complex business processes.
"The response from AWS customers who are developing generative AI applications powered by Anthropic in Amazon Bedrock has been remarkable," Matt Garman, AWS CEO, said in a release. "By continuing to deploy Anthropic models in Amazon Bedrock and collaborating with Anthropic on the development of our custom Trainium chips, we’ll keep pushing the boundaries of what customers can achieve with generative AI technologies. We’ve been impressed by Anthropic’s pace of innovation and commitment to responsible development of generative AI, and look forward to deepening our collaboration."
Specifically, the new global average robot density has reached a record 162 units per 10,000 employees in 2023, which is more than double the mark of 74 units measured seven years ago.
Broken into geographical regions, the European Union has a robot density of 219 units per 10,000 employees, an increase of 5.2%, with Germany, Sweden, Denmark and Slovenia in the global top ten. Next, North America’s robot density is 197 units per 10,000 employees – up 4.2%. And Asia has a robot density of 182 units per 10,000 persons employed in manufacturing - an increase of 7.6%. The economies of Korea, Singapore, mainland China and Japan are among the top ten most automated countries.
Broken into individual countries, the U.S. ranked in 10th place in 2023, with a robot density of 295 units. Higher up on the list, the top five are:
The Republic of Korea, with 1,012 robot units, showing a 5% increase on average each year since 2018 thanks to its strong electronics and automotive industries.
Singapore had 770 robot units, in part because it is a small country with a very low number of employees in the manufacturing industry, so it can reach a high robot density with a relatively small operational stock.
China took third place in 2023, surpassing Germany and Japan with a mark of 470 robot units as the nation has managed to double its robot density within four years.
Germany ranks fourth with 429 robot units for a 5% CAGR since 2018.
Japan is in fifth place with 419 robot units, showing growth of 7% on average each year from 2018 to 2023.
Progress in generative AI (GenAI) is poised to impact business procurement processes through advancements in three areas—agentic reasoning, multimodality, and AI agents—according to Gartner Inc.
Those functions will redefine how procurement operates and significantly impact the agendas of chief procurement officers (CPOs). And 72% of procurement leaders are already prioritizing the integration of GenAI into their strategies, thus highlighting the recognition of its potential to drive significant improvements in efficiency and effectiveness, Gartner found in a survey conducted in July, 2024, with 258 global respondents.
Gartner defined the new functions as follows:
Agentic reasoning in GenAI allows for advanced decision-making processes that mimic human-like cognition. This capability will enable procurement functions to leverage GenAI to analyze complex scenarios and make informed decisions with greater accuracy and speed.
Multimodality refers to the ability of GenAI to process and integrate multiple forms of data, such as text, images, and audio. This will make GenAI more intuitively consumable to users and enhance procurement's ability to gather and analyze diverse information sources, leading to more comprehensive insights and better-informed strategies.
AI agents are autonomous systems that can perform tasks and make decisions on behalf of human operators. In procurement, these agents will automate procurement tasks and activities, freeing up human resources to focus on strategic initiatives, complex problem-solving and edge cases.
As CPOs look to maximize the value of GenAI in procurement, the study recommended three starting points: double down on data governance, develop and incorporate privacy standards into contracts, and increase procurement thresholds.
“These advancements will usher procurement into an era where the distance between ideas, insights, and actions will shorten rapidly,” Ryan Polk, senior director analyst in Gartner’s Supply Chain practice, said in a release. "Procurement leaders who build their foundation now through a focus on data quality, privacy and risk management have the potential to reap new levels of productivity and strategic value from the technology."
Businesses are cautiously optimistic as peak holiday shipping season draws near, with many anticipating year-over-year sales increases as they continue to battle challenging supply chain conditions.
That’s according to the DHL 2024 Peak Season Shipping Survey, released today by express shipping service provider DHL Express U.S. The company surveyed small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to gauge their holiday business outlook compared to last year and found that a mix of optimism and “strategic caution” prevail ahead of this year’s peak.
Nearly half (48%) of the SMEs surveyed said they expect higher holiday sales compared to 2023, while 44% said they expect sales to remain on par with last year, and just 8% said they foresee a decline. Respondents said the main challenges to hitting those goals are supply chain problems (35%), inflation and fluctuating consumer demand (34%), staffing (16%), and inventory challenges (14%).
But respondents said they have strategies in place to tackle those issues. Many said they began preparing for holiday season earlier this year—with 45% saying they started planning in Q2 or earlier, up from 39% last year. Other strategies include expanding into international markets (35%) and leveraging holiday discounts (32%).
Sixty percent of respondents said they will prioritize personalized customer service as a way to enhance customer interactions and loyalty this year. Still others said they will invest in enhanced web and mobile experiences (23%) and eco-friendly practices (13%) to draw customers this holiday season.