The data suggest that across the non-core services (i.e. services other than warehousing/transportation/inventory management/fulfilment), which are currently outsourced to LSPs by less than half of the retailers we spoke to, there is a huge amount of room for growth in coming years. In every function we asked about, at least 21% of retailers were considering outsourcing, and in several areas that figure was significantly higher.
Retailer demand for outsourced order management, for example, could be set to nearly double, with 30% of retailers saying they’d consider using LSPs to manage orders in the next 5 years.
Analytics services were the most likely to be considered as a future LSP responsibility (by 39% of retail leaders), followed by order management (30%), technology integration (27%) and customs brokerage (26%).
The market dynamics behind the shift
Our research found that the market in retail logistics is split in two. A little over half of retailers (52%) see their LSPs as strategic enablers. The rest do not.
What’s happening is that LSPs who are going beyond the essential requirements of their retailers are winning ground. They’re becoming embedded more deeply in their clients’ businesses, retaining more customers, and winning more new business. That requires consistency and efficiency at the core, of course, but it also comes from the broader variety of services they’re able to offer. Retailers value flexibility and responsiveness even more than cost-efficiency, according to the survey data.