From blind spots to clarity

Item-level visibility is the latest supply chain trend

Real-time supply chain visibility is the ability to track, monitor, and analyse every part of the supply chain as events happen. But despite the promise, many organisations still cannot answer a basic customer question quickly: where is my order right now, and what condition is it in?

When traceability is limited, small issues escalate fast. Teams lose time reconciling what was shipped versus what was received, and customer service is left explaining delays without clear evidence.

Research suggests that up to 75% of businesses still lack meaningful end-to-end supply chain visibility.

The shift already underway: from “overall” to item-level visibility

Change is already underway. Supply chain solutions advisory Zetes reports that visibility is moving from “overall visibility” to item-level visibility, naming it as one of the biggest supply chain trends of 2026.

Instead of relying on broad shipment updates, organisations are increasingly equipping individual units with lightweight sensors, IoT labels, and smarter capture methods. The result is that each product or asset becomes a trusted, on-the-ground source of data.

This shift makes it easier to spot exceptions as they happen, respond faster, and make decisions based on evidence rather than assumptions.

Artificial intelligence adds another layer by detecting patterns and helping teams prioritise next actions.

What item-level visibility changes day to day

Item-level visibility unlocks several practical benefits.

  • Faster exception handling: Teams can identify and resolve issues at the unit level before they escalate into costly claims or delays.
  • Stronger chain-of-custody: Tracking at the item level provides verifiable proof of location, condition, and custody, reducing ambiguity when problems arise.
  • Fewer reconciliation claims: Real-time capture replaces assumptions with evidence, minimising disputes between shippers and receivers.
  • More reliable ETAs: By tracking individual units rather than broad shipments, organisations can provide more accurate delivery updates and improve service reliability.

Taken together, these gains do more than improve performance. They change what a supply chain is: shifting it from a series of linked handoffs into a verified, data-backed system that can adapt in real time.

And that’s the real shift.

Item-level visibility becomes the foundation for faster decisions, stronger accountability, and agile supply chains that keep moving when conditions change.

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