Zoho Study: 2 in 5 UK Businesses Cut Costs Against Shrinkflation

  • Zoho’s Digital Health Study surveyed 302 UK businesses (1,503 across Europe)
  • 41% of respondents are cutting costs to cope with shrinkflation
  • 56% of businesses are seeing rising costs across departments, and as a result 27% cut AI spend in 2024
  • 18% cited high inflation as worrying them most

Currently, in the UK, businesses are attempting to recover from the effects of economic turbulence caused by factors including rising costs, rampant inflation and supply chain disruptions.

Zoho recently commissioned Censuswide to survey 1,503 senior digital transformation decision makers in firms with 25+ employees across the UK, France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands between 31.10.24 – 12.11.24. The UK sample comprised of 302 senior digital transformation decision makers, evenly split across large businesses, comprising of 1000+ employees, medium businesses 250-999 employees, and small businesses 25-249 employees.

The Digital Health Study revealed that two in five (41 per cent) of UK businesses have reported they are cutting costs to deal with shrinkflation – getting fewer services and functionality for the same or more cost – in order to maintain the same level of quality in what they offer to customers. The survey revealed that 18% of UK respondents cited high inflation as a top concern beyond their control in 2024.

56% of business respondents are seeing rising costs across their business, prompting 34% to take more services in-house, reducing reliance on external vendors. To fight economic turbulence, AI projects (27%), digital transformation initiatives (25%), and staffing (25%) were stated as areas of cost-cutting in 2024 by UK respondents to the survey.

To deliver further value, improved customer support (53%), flexible payment options (40%), and greater communications and transparency (39%) were listed by UK businesses responding to the survey as areas that were reviewed and improved to better support customers during turbulent economic times in the past year.

Sachin Agrawal, Managing Director, Zoho UK, commented: “The UK economy has faced significant challenges in recent years, so quite rightly, many business leaders are focusing on future-proofing their operations amid an ongoing permacrisis which continues to cause disruption.”

 “To create the best chance of success, businesses must closely examine their digital transformation efforts to ensure they have the tools to weather any storm. It is encouraging to see a shift in priorities toward technology as businesses strive for greater resilience. This forms part of a wider drive to deliver greater customer value in attraction and retention strategies. Businesses should continue to develop long-term customer partnerships offering increased value, especially during periods of economic uncertainty.”

Agrawal continues: “By adopting the right digital tools, supported by a strong leadership style, a customer-focused culture, and an engaged workforce, businesses can boost flexibility, adaptability, and agility for long-term success.”

Despite turbulence throughout 2024, 81 per cent of UK business respondents claimed they felt prepared to navigate the economic challenges in 2025.

To end on a positive note, 85% of UK business respondents are optimistic about business conditions in the next year, which is higher than that of other European respondents at 80%.

Share by Email
Facebook
Twitter
Whatsapp
LinkedIn

Related Articles

Featured

Read our latest magazine