Enterprises continue to
view supplier diversity as a value-generating supply chain strategy and are
implementing programs as planned, according to the 2023 State of Supplier
Diversity report. which was recently released by Supplier.io, the
market-leading Software as a Service (SaaS) provider of supplier diversity data
and management solutions.
The research found most
businesses (69%) report that the current economic climate has had minimal
impact on their supplier diversity programs, and 89% expect business support to
stay the same or increase in the upcoming year.
A notable 66% of those
surveyed cited supply chain competitiveness (cost savings, risk reduction,
innovation, etc.) as a primary driver for their supplier diversity program. The
research also found few organizations are investing solely for corporate, regulatory
or societal requirements. In fact, when evaluating the business drivers of
supplier diversity, implementing for customer requirements and government
compliance were down 33% and 27%, respectively, over the past six years.
“Supplier diversity
remains an intentional and essential supply chain strategy,” said Aylin Basom,
CEO of Supplier.io. “Our research continues to show wide-ranging investments in
diverse businesses of all types — including SMBs [small businesses], veteran-
and women-owned businesses, minority-owned organizations and more. Programs
have matured substantially over the past few years, resulting in a bigger
impact for the businesses and across the global economy.”
The State of Supplier
Diversity report was compiled based on insights from hundreds of respondents,
67% of which work at organizations with revenues of $1 billion or higher.
Select findings from the research include:
Companies won’t be shy
about promoting their supplier diversity programs, despite the political
environment. Only 7% said they plan to publicly promote their programs less
moving forward; 38% said their public promotion would stay the same, and 16%
indicated public promotion would increase.
Executive support and
program accountability increases in 2023. A remarkable 97% said executive
support remains consistent or better compared to last year; 72% of companies
now have clearly defined supplier diversity goals, up from 68% last year;
nearly half (48%) include supplier diversity metrics in management KPIs.
The business value of
supplier diversity remains strong and broad. In addition to supply chain
competitiveness, companies are investing in supplier diversity to enhance their
brand image (53%), win new business (46%) and align with corporate culture and workforce
inclusiveness (81%).
Supplier diversity
programs help drive ESG performance, while standing on their own. 55% said
supplier diversity helps drive their organization’s overall ESG strategy.
Data is the pillar of
supplier diversity. 67% are now using third-party data services to improve
supplier diversity programs, a 44% increase over 2022. 56% report that the
diversity data they have access to has improved compared to last year.
“Reliable data remains the
lifeblood of supplier diversity programs,” Basom said. “Our research found that
three of the top four challenges associated with supplier diversity programs
today relate back to data, which correlates to the increased adoption of
third-party sources we’re seeing across the market. Investing in your data
remains the most important step to baseline, grow and expand your program.
Supplier diversity is now a driving force in ESG [environmental, social and
governance] strategies and outcomes, especially across the supply chain.”
To read the 2023 State of
Supplier Diversity Report, visit
supplier.io/resources/reports/2023-state-of-supplier-diversity-report.
To learn more about
supplier.io, visit supplier.io.