Company momentum reflects strong customer adoption and continued innovation of AI-driven supply chain capabilities
Blue Yonder, the AI company for supply chain, recently released its Q4-2025 company highlights.
The FY25 company revenue was US$ 1.42bn, including 10.4% SaaS revenue growth year-over-year. Net revenue retention was 103.8%. Blue Yonder gained a total of 114 new customers in FY25.
Solution highlights
Blue Yonder continued its innovation momentum, unveiling significant enhancements to its Demand and Supply Planning and Warehouse Management solutions. Highlights include:
- Extended collaborative planning through the Blue Yonder Network so teams can adjust inventory, reroute shipments, engage alternate suppliers and reallocate capacity in near real time.
- Integrated Sustainable Supply Chain Manager to quantify emissions and waste impacts.
Improved interoperability with logistics and warehouse execution constraints.
Warehouse Management
Highlights include:
- Added AI-driven capabilities to help operators see and respond faster during the day, including the Warehouse Ops Agent for dynamic daily briefs and real-time monitoring that surfaces actionable insights.
- Introduced new resource orchestration and forecasting capabilities to support intraday decisioning by dynamically matching labor, equipment and tasks based on shifting priorities, skills and bottlenecks.
Enhancements
With these enhancements, Blue Yonder helps customers sense disruption faster and respond with precision and confidence, using AI-driven, insight-led planning and real-time warehouse execution to improve service levels, reduce cost and waste, and align decisions to financial and sustainability goals.
“Supply chain teams are being asked to deliver faster service and stronger performance, even as disruption and complexity keep rising,” stated Duncan Angove, CEO, Blue Yonder.
“Our continued momentum reflects that customers are choosing Blue Yonder’s AI-driven solutions to unify planning and execution, turn data into insights and faster decisions and essentially build more resilient supply chains,” he added.
