The holid
ay shopping season is upon us – a time where supply chains need to be performing at peak. More than ever, customers today expect correct and on-time delivery of items they buy online.
Not meeting these expectations will cause customers to go elsewhere, losing sales for your company during what has already become a record-setting holiday sales season. Black Friday 2012 sales have set a jaw-dropping new record at $1 billion, and Cyber Monday sales were up nearly 30 percent over last year.
CNN has reported that Amazon led the pack in online sales for these two very important shopping days (no real surprise). Their innovations in customer satisfaction and service have put them at the forefront. Amazon’s same-day delivery and Prime membership features are just a few of the innovations that keep folks coming back.
And did you hear the news about Amazon CEO and founder Jeff Bezos? He was just named Fortune’s 2012 Businessperson of the Year.
The announcement came with a headline calling Bezos “the ultimate disrupter." This means that the most influential and important businessperson this year, whose company is obsessed with customer satisfaction, is also disrupting “business as usual” in nearly every industry. To compete, you must have a demand-driven supply chain that responds in real-time to customer needs in any and all channels.
So what more can we learn from Bezos and his disruptions, as well as Amazon’s role in the shift in customer expectations? Here are four insights:
It’s clear that the definition of customer satisfaction is changing, and the Amazon Effect is leading the way. Are your customers going to expect to be treated the same way they are treated at Amazon? If not, what is the alternative?
Happy Holidays and Supply Chain Days,
Jim