Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Forward Thinking

Keurig Green Mountain's creative approach to strengthening supplier relationships

The U.S.-based coffee company is drawing on its longstanding commitment to creating positive change in local communities to help it build supplier loyalty.

Photo: Keurig coffee


Keurig, maker of the familiar single-serving coffee pods, involves its suppliers in community service programs.

Ask supply chain partners why they work well together, and they'll often mention having a "good cultural fit"—sharing similar values, priorities, and business cultures—as one of the keys to their success. But simply having those characteristics in common isn't sufficient; buyers and suppliers also need to strengthen and maintain those relationships.


Keurig Green Mountain Inc., a Waterbury, Vt.-based provider of specialty coffees and coffee makers, understands that. To help cement relationships with its suppliers, the company has taken an unusual path: involving them in its community service programs.

Keurig Green Mountain hosts an annual Top 100 Suppliers event for its most strategic suppliers. The company saw that event as an opportunity to connect with suppliers on a deeper level, one that went beyond sharing business strategies about new markets or product ideas.

One time-tested way to do that is through social gatherings. "Sometimes the opportunity for the next big idea is not in the conversation that you have over the conference table," explained Amena Smith, director of procurement, in an interview. "It's the conversation you have over the dinner table."

Keurig Green Mountain employees and suppliers assembling bundles of books for children

Employees from Keurig Green Mountain and their suppliers volunteered at the Boston-area charity Cradles to Crayons assembling bundles of books for local children in need.

The planning team for the supplier event wanted to achieve the kind of relationship-building benefits that a dinner or a golf outing might offer while also tapping into a core part of the company's cultural identity: social responsibility and the importance of giving back. Every year, Keurig Green Mountain gives all of its employees 52 hours of paid volunteer time. "It's not just something that's 'on the books,' it's actively encouraged," Smith said. "There's talk about what our goals are going to be and, if we are not using our hours, how we can get together as a team and fulfill our community service goals."

Community service is so ingrained in the company's culture that it has a formal "volunteerism" team that helps to identify volunteer opportunities and facilitate those efforts. Smith and her procurement colleagues tapped into that expertise to design volunteer activities as part of their annual supplier event. This past year, those activities included sorting children's clothing and school supplies for the Boston, Massachusetts-based charity Cradles to Crayons and making "no-sew" blankets for local shelters and the Boston Children's Hospital.

According to Smith, the volunteer activities received high ratings from participants and have opened up new lines of communication between Keurig Green Mountain's employees and their suppliers. "There's something really lovely about working on a project with one another that's adjacent to the business but not the business," Smith said.

Keurig Green Mountain is not the only company to adopt this approach. The chemical and agricultural giant Monsanto, for example, has participated in community service programs with its logistics service provider C.H. Robinson Worldwide Inc. One of these volunteer events, for the international nonprofit Stop Hunger Now, took place in conjunction with last year's Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) annual conference.

Want to try it yourself?

For those who are interested in hosting similar events with their suppliers, the following advice from Keurig Green Mountain may prove helpful.

1) Find organizations that resonate with your company's culture. There are seemingly unlimited ways that a company can impact the greater good, but it's important to focus on volunteer opportunities that align with your particular company's culture. "We worked with groups that we had experience with and that had resonated with people who had participated in the past," Smith said.

2) Offer on-site and off-site events. It may be hard for some suppliers to give up four hours to participate in an off-site volunteer event. Recognizing this, Keurig Green Mountain provided both off-site and on-site opportunities. One group traveled to the Cradles to Crayons distribution center to sort clothes and assemble outfits for children, while others created no-sew blankets at the supplier event itself.

Keurig Green Mountain offered these different opportunities based on feedback from their suppliers. "The first year we didn't have a lot of participation [in the volunteer events]," Smith said. "When we sent out our after-event survey, we heard from the people who did volunteer what a great benefit it was for them, and from the people who couldn't do it how much they would have liked to participate if we had timed things differently."

3. Be authentic. Most importantly, Smith stresses that these events have to "be real." "This isn't something that you should pretend is important to the company. It has to be part of your core values," she said. "Don't fake it, because this is a really genuine kind of thing that people work on together, and if anything is false about it, it's going to be evident."

Recent

More Stories

cover of report on electrical efficiency

ABI: Push to drop fossil fuels also needs better electric efficiency

Companies in every sector are converting assets from fossil fuel to electric power in their push to reach net-zero energy targets and to reduce costs along the way, but to truly accelerate those efforts, they also need to improve electric energy efficiency, according to a study from technology consulting firm ABI Research.

In fact, boosting that efficiency could contribute fully 25% of the emissions reductions needed to reach net zero. And the pursuit of that goal will drive aggregated global investments in energy efficiency technologies to grow from $106 Billion in 2024 to $153 Billion in 2030, ABI said today in a report titled “The Role of Energy Efficiency in Reaching Net Zero Targets for Enterprises and Industries.”

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

Logistics economy continues on solid footing
Logistics Managers' Index

Logistics economy continues on solid footing

Economic activity in the logistics industry expanded in November, continuing a steady growth pattern that began earlier this year and signaling a return to seasonality after several years of fluctuating conditions, according to the latest Logistics Managers’ Index report (LMI), released today.

The November LMI registered 58.4, down slightly from October’s reading of 58.9, which was the highest level in two years. The LMI is a monthly gauge of business conditions across warehousing and logistics markets; a reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below 50 indicates contraction.

Keep ReadingShow less
iceberg drawing to represent threats

GEP: six factors could change calm to storm in 2025

The current year is ending on a calm note for the logistics sector, but 2025 is on pace to be an era of rapid transformation, due to six driving forces that will shape procurement and supply chains in coming months, according to a forecast from New Jersey-based supply chain software provider GEP.

"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."

Keep ReadingShow less
chart of top business concerns from descartes

Descartes: businesses say top concern is tariff hikes

Business leaders at companies of every size say that rising tariffs and trade barriers are the most significant global trade challenge facing logistics and supply chain leaders today, according to a survey from supply chain software provider Descartes.

Specifically, 48% of respondents identified rising tariffs and trade barriers as their top concern, followed by supply chain disruptions at 45% and geopolitical instability at 41%. Moreover, tariffs and trade barriers ranked as the priority issue regardless of company size, as respondents at companies with less than 250 employees, 251-500, 501-1,000, 1,001-50,000 and 50,000+ employees all cited it as the most significant issue they are currently facing.

Keep ReadingShow less
photo of worker at port tracking containers

Trump tariff threat strains logistics businesses

Freight transportation providers and maritime port operators are bracing for rough business impacts if the incoming Trump Administration follows through on its pledge to impose a 25% tariff on Mexico and Canada and an additional 10% tariff on China, analysts say.

Industry contacts say they fear that such heavy fees could prompt importers to “pull forward” a massive surge of goods before the new administration is seated on January 20, and then quickly cut back again once the hefty new fees are instituted, according to a report from TD Cowen.

Keep ReadingShow less