Imperial Logistics Opens Supply Chain Lab in Cape Town
20th June 2018
Imperial Logistics has opened another Supply Chain Lab (SCL) in Cape Town. The logistics service provider will support its clients in developing their own digital strategy at a co-working complex in the restored port district. The service provided at the new SCL ties in with the success of the first Supply Chain Lab, which Imperial Logistics had set up in Berlin 18 months ago. IT experts from Imperial Logistics working with logistics experts, IT specialists and IT students will develop structured solutions that are tailored to individual client requirements in the creative environment near the student and start-up scene.
Michael Lütjann, Chief Information Officer (CIO) at Imperial Logistics, says: “Digitalisation is changing the way that we operate our business in a fundamental manner. Companies that wish to remain competitive should make the best possible use of disruptive technologies and new trends, redesign long-serving business models and establish new ones.”
Lütjann continues, “We’ll continue in Cape Town what we started in Berlin – that is to say, pursuing flexible, open and innovative approaches. We have to break loose from traditional thought patterns. The SCL in Berlin,” the CIO says, “has opened the doors for new projects for the company. We have already worked with a number of international clients there.” The company’s own start-up known as “ShareHouse”, a web-based marketing portal for storage space, is also a fruit of the Berlin SCL.
The services made available at the Supply Chain Labs in Berlin and Cape Town include digitalisation workshops and training courses for consolidating digital skills. Problems are identified, ideas for solutions are developed and initial visual prototypes are programmed in creathons, so-called design sprints, within five days.
Minimal Viable Products (MVP) are another approach; at first, they are only equipped with the most essential functions for a solution or an application.
“MVPs are an effective way to get the first version off the ground as quickly as possible and learn things from users or clients as early as possible,” Lütjann explains. He cites a business intelligence tool that analyses the profitability of contracts as an example of an MVP that was recently developed at the Berlin SCL. “We presented our product to the Board of Directors at Imperial Logistics after just six weeks and gained valuable information on what needed to be adjusted. We’re currently introducing this tool to all the operating companies at Imperial Logistics.”