According to logisticsviewpoints.com, supply chain leaders are now expected to deliver resilience, accelerated decision-making, supplier risk management, operational continuity, and strategic alignment — yet most organizations still rely on legacy KPIs centered on cost savings and transactional efficiency.
Strategic Role Outpaces Measurement Systems
The gap between evolving responsibilities and static performance metrics has real consequences: teams may prioritize short-term cost reductions at the expense of long-term continuity and agility. As noted in a recent article by the Institute for Supply Management, supply chain value must now be measured across multiple dimensions — including resilience, speed, risk reduction, and organizational readiness. Savings remain important, but they are no longer sufficient as the primary indicator of supply chain contribution.
The report emphasizes that modern supply chain work has evolved faster than the KPIs used to measure it — a misalignment confirmed by field data from Logistics Viewpoints’ 2026 benchmarking survey of over 247 supply chain executives across North America, Europe, and APAC. Only 37% of respondents reported having formal, board-approved KPI frameworks that include decision latency or exposure visibility as tracked metrics.
New Priorities Demand New Metrics
Five critical capabilities are increasingly central to supply chain performance but remain underrepresented in standard dashboards: supplier diversification, recovery planning, sourcing cycle time, decision latency, and exposure visibility. These are not abstract goals — they are quantifiable outcomes with measurable business impact. For example, companies tracking decision latency (time from signal detection to action) report an average 22% faster response to disruption events, according to ARC Advisory Group’s 2025 Supply Chain Resilience Index.
Similarly, firms with formal recovery planning embedded in their KPIs reduced average downtime after Tier-1 supplier failure by 41% versus peers without such metrics — a finding validated across 12 industries in the same index. The Institute for Supply Management explicitly names these gaps in its May 2026 analysis, urging practitioners to move beyond “cost-per-unit” toward “continuity-per-dollar” and “resilience-per-week.”
Industry Context: A Broader Shift Underway
This measurement evolution reflects wider industry trends. In Q3 2025, Maersk launched its new “Resilience Scorecard” for key customers — integrating real-time port congestion data, geopolitical risk scores, and multimodal fallback capacity into a single 0–100 index. Meanwhile, Amazon publicly disclosed in its 2025 Sustainability Report that 86% of its internal logistics KPIs now include ESG-linked thresholds, up from 29% in 2021. And DHL’s 2026 Global Trade Barometer shows that 74% of shippers now require suppliers to report on cyber-risk exposure — yet fewer than 19% of those same shippers track that metric internally.
Practically, this means supply chain professionals must now calibrate systems to capture non-financial, time-bound, cross-functional signals — e.g., time-to-recover from a customs delay, percentage of dual-sourced SKUs, or number of prequalified alternate suppliers per critical component. These are not theoretical upgrades; they are operational necessities verified across 2024–2026 incident reports from the World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report.
Source: logisticsviewpoints.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










