Procurement Moves Online as a Result of Pandemic

Propelled in large part by the pandemic, procurement across all sectors, including K–12 and higher education, is making a big shift toward online. Some 85 percent of organizations report they pushed more of their procurement to digital as a direct result of the pandemic, and 96 percent of those expect to continue doing so beyond the pandemic, according to a report released this week.

The 2021 B2B E-commerce in Evolution Report, from Amazon Business, found that, in education in particular, more than a third of institutions (34 percent) now do more than half of their procurement online. (That’s slightly below the overall average of 38 percent.)

The top priorities from survey respondents in education diverge from other sectors. They include:

  1. Reducing costs;

  2. Supporting remote work;

  3. Increasing supply chain diversification;

  4. Improving sustainability; and

  5. Supporting local businesses within the community.

According to the report: “Nearly half (46 percent) of education buyers said supporting remote work and learning is a top priority for 2021. Like nearly every other sector, the education industry has experienced fundamental changes as a result of the pandemic, and it’s likely this trend will remain in some capacity. Schools are thinking beyond the traditional classroom and leveraging technology to offer more flexible, remote teaching environments — permanently. Online purchasing has emerged as a convenient and efficient way to track and send school supplies to teachers and students dispersed across geographic locations.”

More details and a link to the complete report are available on the Amazon Business blog.

About the Author

David Nagel is the former editorial director of 1105 Media's Education Group and editor-in-chief of THE Journal, STEAM Universe, and Spaces4Learning. A 30-year publishing veteran, Nagel has led or contributed to dozens of technology, art, marketing, media, and business publications.

He can be reached at [email protected]. You can also connect with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidrnagel/ .


Featured

  • digital data protection and cyber security

    White House Launches New AI Security Framework

    President Donald Trump has issued a new executive order aimed at maintaining United States AI leadership while addressing the security risks posed by increasingly powerful AI systems.

  • silhouette of business person facing wall of data

    Why AI Strategy Belongs in the President's Office

    Institutions that are succeeding with AI share one thing in common, and it is not a better committee, a larger budget, or a more sophisticated technology stack. It is a president who never handed off the steering wheel.

  • glowing brain above stacked coins

    The Higher Ed Playbook for AI Affordability

    Fulfilling the promise of AI in higher education does not require massive budgets or radical reinvention. By leveraging existing infrastructure, embracing edge and localized AI, collaborating across institutions, and embedding AI thoughtfully across the enterprise, universities can move from experimentation to impact.

  • Dana Brunson facilitates a roundtable discussion with research and higher education IT leaders

    Internet2: Closing the Access Gap for Research Cyberinfrastructure

    Internet2's Research Engagement Team brings CIOs and other campus technology leadership together with research computing and data facilitators, forming a community that enables research cyberinfrastructure at institutions of all types and sizes.