
New Survey From JBF Consulting Identifies “Implementation Integrity Gap” as Primary Driver of Missed Outcomes in Logistics Technology Programs
88% of supply chain leaders report implementations fall short on time, budget, or expected results
GUILFORD, CT – (May 12, 2026) – JBF Consulting, a leading logistics strategy advisory and technology integration firm, announced today the findings from a new industry survey examining why logistics technology programs consistently underdeliver. The research introduces what JBF defines as the “Implementation Integrity Gap”— a breakdown in how organizations design, structure, and govern implementations in the critical period between vendor selection and execution. Click here to download the full report.
Among more than 2,000 senior supply chain, logistics, and technology leaders that the online survey was presented to in April 2026, 88% of respondents reported that their implementations fell short on time, budget, or expected outcomes. The data points to a consistent pattern: outcomes are largely determined by early-stage decisions that organizations often treat as administrative rather than operationally critical.
Where Implementations Break Down
The findings show that most organizations are not missing in isolated areas. They are consistently under executing across the same set of early implementation disciplines. Only 12.1% of respondents reported delivering on time, on budget, and achieving expected outcomes.
Cost performance reflects the same pattern. 91.8% of organizations experienced budget overruns, most commonly in the 11–25% range. Adoption timelines also extend beyond expectations, with 82.6% requiring more than six months to reach full operational use. These delays carry directly into value realization, where 88.9% of respondents achieved less than 76% of projected ROI.
The data also challenges a common assumption about where risk sits. Internal factors—organizational readiness, ownership, and resource alignment—account for a significantly larger share of implementation issues than vendor performance. In practical terms, most of the risk is within the organization’s control.
The Missing Discipline in Early Implementation Design
When asked what would have reduced the need for mid-project correction, 61% of respondents pointed to a structured transition from vendor selection into implementation. Fewer than 10% reported actually having that discipline in place.
This gap shows up consistently across related areas:
- Readiness assessments are rarely completed in full
- Cost baselines often exclude internal labor and change management
- Program ownership is defined in title but not in decision authority
- Governance frameworks are introduced late or not at all
- Scope expands without a formal review process
These are not independent issues. They stem from how the implementation is designed at the start. Without a structured transition and clear ownership model, organizations inherit risk that compounds as the program progresses.
Execution Gaps in Ownership, Scope, and Timeline
The survey highlights three decisions that most directly shape implementation outcomes: who owns the timeline, who controls scope, and who has authority to make decisions.
Only 9.1% of organizations defined their implementation timeline based on internal readiness. In many cases, the timeline was set externally or not clearly owned. Scope management follows a similar pattern, with just 8.8% formally reviewing changes against original objectives, despite scope expansion being one of the leading drivers of cost overrun.
The impact of unclear ownership becomes most visible when programs stall. 44.4% of respondents said they sought outside support because decisions could not be made internally due to lack of clear authority. Only about 10% had a single program lead with defined decision rights in place from the start.
From an execution standpoint, this is less about capability and more about design. When authority is not established early, it does not appear later when decisions become time-sensitive.
Adoption and Value Realization Follow Predictable Patterns
Downstream outcomes reflect these early design choices. Only 8.2% of organizations provided role-specific, workflow-based training, meaning most teams were trained on system functionality rather than how to do their jobs within it.
The result is slower adoption and compressed value:
- 82.6% took more than six months to reach full adoption
- Only 11.1% realized 76% or more of projected business value
This sequence—generic training, delayed adoption, reduced outcomes—is one of the clearest cause-and-effect relationships in the data.
“Most organizations don’t have a technology problem. They have an implementation design problem,” said Brad Forester, CEO of JBF Consulting. “The teams that consistently deliver outcomes are the ones that treat the transition into implementation as an operational discipline, not a handoff.”
Low Confidence Signals a Structural Opportunity
Despite continued investment in logistics technology, confidence in future implementations remains limited. Only 7.1% of respondents reported being confident in their next program, while the majority indicated caution or uncertainty.
The takeaway is straightforward. Organizations understand that outcomes are inconsistent. What has not changed is how implementations are set up in the first place.
JBF Consulting’s work with clients focuses on closing this gap through a pragmatic, vendor-agnostic approach to implementation design—establishing ownership, structuring governance, aligning scope to business outcomes, and building adoption into the program from the start.
For more information about this survey data and to explore the key findings in greater detail, please click here to download the full report.
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About JBF Consulting
JBF Consulting is a leading logistics strategy advisory and technology integration firm that partners with shippers to transform their logistics and supply chain execution operations. We empower clients to achieve operational efficiency and scalable, sustainable value through strategy development, roadmap orchestration, unbiased technology selection, expert implementation, data-driven insights, and ongoing managed services. For over two decades, our client-centric approach and partnerships with best-of-breed solution providers have ensured that every strategy and solution we deliver drives measurable impact, long-term success, and customer satisfaction.