Organizations are increasingly leveraging API integrations to 
break down data silos and automate workflows.  -  Photo: Samsara

Organizations are increasingly leveraging API integrations to
break down data silos and automate workflows.

Photo: Samsara

Since the invention of the internet and cloud computing, we have seen a steady shift in the way organizations operate as they leverage digital tools to work smarter and faster. But while Gartner reports that 87% of senior leaders say digitalization is a priority, only 40% of organizations have brought digital initiatives to scale.

In the past year, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated this “shift towards digital” dramatically. The sudden increase in remote working and shifting customer preferences towards remote interactions and real-time data has brought about an accelerated digital transformation—one we are currently in the middle of. In fact, a new McKinsey & Company survey found organizations had accelerated the digitalization of their customer interactions, supply chain interactions, and core internal operations by three to four years and acted 20 to 25 times faster than expected in enacting these changes.

Samsara is seeing its 20,000+ customers are leveraging digital tools like its open API and mobile apps at a rapidly increasing rate. As their operations become increasingly interconnected, Samsara is also seeing more organizations adopt its cloud-based solutions across not just one or two areas of their operations, but four or five.

Using cohort analysis to control for growth in customer count, Samsara analyzed aggregated data from thousands of customers to reveal how organizations are experiencing this accelerated digital transformation.

Key findings

● Analyzing a sample cohort of thousands of customers, Samsara saw an 80% increase in API pings to its Connected Operations Platform from January 2020 to March 2021, signaling organizations are looking for new ways to break down data silos, customize their tech stack, and boost productivity through automated workflows.

● Similarly, among a sample cohort of thousands of customers, it saw a 18% increase in overall usage of its mobile Driver App and 45% increase in usage of its digital documents feature from January 2020 to March 2021. The pandemic accelerated the adoption of these tools by both employees in the field and back-office who are embracing the benefits of increased productivity and efficiency and continuing to “go paperless.”

● Looking at an industry-specific subset of its customer base, from September 2020 to March 2021, it saw a 20% increase in the number of transportation and warehousing customers connecting their operations on the cloud by using Samsara's solutions across three or more distinct areas. This reveals how cloud-based digitalization is expanding beyond vehicle telematics (where it first began with AOBRDs and ELDs) into operational areas like site security and equipment monitoring, where organizations are modernizing their technology stack and looking for ways to make that expansion smooth by using a single cloud-based platform.

Organizations are increasingly leveraging API integrations to break down data silos and automate workflows

A key element of digitalization is leveraging Application Programming Interfaces (APIs), which enable organizations to share information between different systems. When organizations create system integrations via APIs, it empowers them to develop new workflows and unlock automation that wouldn’t otherwise be possible. In fact, many organizations have identified APIs as their “largest enabler of digital transformation strategies.”

Samsara’s Connected Operations Platform offers an open API and robust ecosystem of integrations, which allows its customers to share data with the critical systems that are already part of their day-to-day operations—including transportation management systems (TMS), fuel cards, payroll systems, and more.

Usage of Samsara's API has increased dramatically over the past year. To control for new customers implementing Samsara, it analyzed a sample cohort of thousands of customers from January 2020 to March 2021. Over that time period, it saw a 80% increase in pings to its API, across a wide range of different integrations.

This dramatic increase in API usage signals organizations are becoming more sophisticated in their use of technology and data. They've moved beyond simply collecting data to use within a single system and are increasingly connecting systems across their organization to empower other teams, create new workflows, and digitize previously manual processes.

For example, TCI Transportation used Samsara’s API integration with McLeod LoadMaster to automate route assignment and tracking—transforming their day-to-day operations through digitalization.

“With [this API integration,] our dispatchers don’t have to spend their days manually processing orders,” said Andy Figueroa, director of quality assurance at TCI. “It has freed up their time to focus on ensuring their drivers are running efficiently.”

Remote productivity tools made necessary by COVID-19 saw 
huge adoption gains last year, and are likely here to stay.  -  Photo: Samsara

Remote productivity tools made necessary by COVID-19 saw
huge adoption gains last year, and are likely here to stay.

Photo: Samsara

Remote productivity tools made necessary by COVID-19 saw huge adoption gains last year, and are likely here to stay

When the COVID-19 pandemic took hold in March 2020, organizations had to adapt to a new normal—a world where in-person interactions were risky. One way organizations are adapting to this changing environment is by embracing digital tools that enable remote work.

For example, with the Samsara Driver App, drivers can “clock in'' and access assigned routes without an in-person interaction. With the documents feature, drivers can upload digital documents (like DVIRs and proofs of delivery) to back-office administrators remotely in real time—enabling contactless document collection.

Even before the pandemic, there was already an industry-wide shift towards using digital tools to increase efficiency. As a result of COVID-19 accelerating this existing trend, usage of Samsara's Driver App and digital documents feature has increased dramatically over the past year. To control for new customers implementing Samsara, it analyzed a sample cohort of thousands of customers from January 2020 to March 2021. Over that time period, the company saw a 18% increase in Driver App usage and a 45% increase in digital document submissions.

As seen in the charts above, Samsara initially saw a decrease in activity when COVID-19 first hit in March 2020—mirroring trends first observed in June 2020—as organizations reacted to shutdown orders. But since then, it has seen a dramatic increase in both Driver App usage and digital document submissions, signaling increased reliance on these remote productivity tools.

Based on this usage data and qualitative insights from customers, it seems likely that adoption of these digital tools will continue to increase even after the pandemic ends. COVID-19 may have accelerated the need for drivers and back-office administrators to communicate remotely—but these digital tools have paid off in spades in the form of increased productivity and efficiency. As a result, organizations are continuing to “go paperless” and modernize their internal operations through digital workflows.

For example, Western Concrete Pumping (WCP), one of the nation's largest concrete pumping companies, has increasingly relied on mobile workflows to communicate with drivers during the pandemic.

"Before COVID-19, we used to travel to each branch office and train operators in person,” said Carol Heinz, fleet administrative assistant at WCP. “[Now,] we can be more confident that our drivers are completing the right tasks in the right sequence, even now that we're working remote."

Based on this usage data and qualitative insights from customers, it seems likely that adoption of 
these digital tools will continue to increase even after the pandemic ends.  -  Photo: Samsara

Based on this usage data and qualitative insights from customers, it seems likely that adoption of
these digital tools will continue to increase even after the pandemic ends.

Photo: Samsara

Organizations are connecting their operations on the cloud

Fleet operations have been going through a digital transformation ever since 1988, when the federal government first mandated the use of automatic on-board recording devices (AOBRDs) to digitally record HOS for compliance purposes. Since then, the ELD mandate has continued to fuel digitalization in fleet operations.

But organizations with vehicles tend to have other operational areas that are ripe for digitalization, too. In recent years, fleets have increasingly adopted dash cams and driver coaching tools, making video-based telematics the “new norm.” In addition, many of these organizations have equipment that needs to be tracked and warehouses that need to be monitored—especially now that the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the need for remote visibility across all areas of operations.

To see how Samsara's customers are expanding digitalization beyond fleet operations, it looked at a sample subset of its customer base in the transportation and warehousing industry from September 2020 to March 2021. Over that time period, it saw a 20% increase in the number of transportation and warehousing customers digitally connecting their operations on the cloud by using Samsara's solutions across three or more distinct areas—going beyond vehicle telematics into driver safety, site security, equipment monitoring, and more.

This reveals how cloud-based digitalization is expanding beyond vehicle telematics into other operational areas where organizations are modernizing their technology stack—and looking for ways to make that expansion smooth by using a single cloud-based platform. Food Express, for example—a bulk transportation business based in California—now relies on Samsara’s cloud-based solutions across four of their operational areas, digitally transforming their entire business. In 2020 alone, they expanded from Vehicle Telematics into Equipment Monitoring, Video-Based Safety, and most recently Site Visibility—Samsara's newest solution that leverages artificial intelligence to bring advanced features, like proactive alerting, to IP security cameras.

The future of connected operations

Samsara believes the world of industrial operations is at the precipice of a massive wave of digital transformation. The proliferation of IoT connectivity, cloud computing, video-based safety, and artificial intelligence are all driving digital adoption—and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have accelerated this trend.

This will make the coming years ones of exciting transformation for organizations across a wide array of industries, from transportation to local government, utilities, manufacturing, and beyond.

Originally posted on Work Truck Online

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