List of ImpactBuying PowerChain Customers
Alkmaar, 1817 BH,
Netherlands
Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying ImpactBuying PowerChain customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased ImpactBuying PowerChain for Blockchain Platform from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using ImpactBuying PowerChain for Blockchain Platform include: Ahold Delhaize, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 390000 employees and revenues of $120.90 billion, Albert Heijn, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 125000 employees and revenues of $54.61 billion, Jumbo Supermarkten, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 43435 employees and revenues of $11.85 billion, PLUS Supermarkt, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 4700 employees and revenues of $650.0 million and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using ImpactBuying PowerChain, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
The ImpactBuying PowerChain customer wins are being incorporated in our Enterprise Applications Buyer Insight and Technographics Customer Database which has over 100 data fields that detail company usage of software systems and their digital transformation initiatives. Apps Run The World wants to become your No. 1 technographic data source!
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| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
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Ahold Delhaize | Retail | 390000 | $120.9B | Netherlands | ImpactBuying | ImpactBuying PowerChain | Blockchain Platform | 2024 | n/a |
In 2024, Ahold Delhaize Netherlands implemented ImpactBuying PowerChain, a Blockchain Platform, to deliver batch-level transparency and animal welfare verification across its egg supply chain. The deployment supports Albert Heijn's ambition to make all fresh supply chains transparent by 2025 and enforces a requirement that eggs sold in stores carry at least a 1-star BLK certification.
ImpactBuying PowerChain is designed as a distributed ledger solution where data is captured and shared by every supply chain partner, from feed to fork. Core functional capabilities implemented include a provenance ledger for batch traceability, a certification registry to record BLK star ratings, consumer-facing lookup tied to the unique number printed on each egg, and immutable audit trails for food safety and quality claims.
Operational coverage explicitly spans the egg supply chain with farm level inputs recorded such as living conditions of laying hens, type of feeding, and stable light schedules, plus batch routing and expiry information. The platform makes these data points accessible to supply chain actors and directly to consumers at the individual egg level, while surfacing risk areas like food safety, quality, animal welfare, and environmental conditions at batch granularity. Business functions affected include sourcing, quality and compliance, animal welfare monitoring, and consumer engagement.
Governance and data sharing were structured with ImpactBuying facilitating consensus among partners about which data elements to share and how to expose them to consumers. ImpactBuying also verifies the timeliness, accuracy and completeness of data from supply chain partners, and the implementation makes participant commitments and farmer stories visible on public channels so consumers can inspect provenance per individual egg.
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Albert Heijn | Retail | 125000 | $54.6B | Netherlands | ImpactBuying | ImpactBuying PowerChain | Blockchain Platform | 2018 | n/a |
In 2018 Albert Heijn implemented ImpactBuying PowerChain as a Blockchain Platform to provide farm to bottle traceability for orange juice, and to surface product journey information to consumers via QR codes. The deployment used ImpactBuying PowerChain and is recorded on ImpactBuying's PowerChain case page as a supply chain traceability for food implementation.
The implementation was built on Hyperledger Fabric, with the distributed ledger providing provenance and immutable event recording across production, processing, and bottling events. Functional capabilities implemented through ImpactBuying PowerChain included batch level traceability, timestamped supply chain event capture, and QR code based consumer access to provenance and sourcing details.
Operational coverage focused on the Netherlands supply chain for Albert Heijn orange juice, and the rollout increased real time data sharing across partner organizations including Refresco and Louis Dreyfus Company. The solution connected supplier and co-packer event feeds into a shared ledger to improve visibility across procurement, quality, and supply chain planning functions.
Governance work included configuring shared ledger permissions and partner data sharing workflows to enable coordinated access while preserving input control, and supplier onboarding to the traceability process. The project delivered improved transparency and consumer engagement as documented by ImpactBuying, with the ImpactBuying PowerChain Blockchain Platform central to the new traceability and consumer transparency capability.
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Jumbo Supermarkten | Retail | 43435 | $11.9B | Netherlands | ImpactBuying | ImpactBuying PowerChain | Blockchain Platform | 2019 | n/a |
In 2019, Jumbo Supermarkten deployed ImpactBuying PowerChain, a Blockchain Platform, to pilot traceability for tilapia sourced from Lake Toba in Indonesia. The pilot published consumer-facing QR code links that connected retail items to provenance records and to surfaced quality checks and certifications ASC and BSCI across the chain.
Jumbo Supermarkten used ImpactBuying PowerChain as a Blockchain Platform to enable supply chain traceability and consumer verification workflows, targeting food supply-chain and quality assurance business functions in the Netherlands. The implementation recorded provenance events, certification statuses, and inspection data on a distributed ledger model, with QR codes providing read access to those records at point of sale.
The rollout was executed as a 2019 pilot in collaboration with supply-chain partners and Regal Springs, and included partner onboarding, certification data mapping, and alignment of traceability processes across supplier nodes. The initiative aimed to increase consumer trust and to provide verifiable evidence for sustainability and labour claims rather than asserting measured operational outcomes.
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PLUS Supermarkt | Retail | 4700 | $650M | Netherlands | ImpactBuying | ImpactBuying PowerChain | Blockchain Platform | 2020 | n/a |
In 2020, PLUS Supermarkt implemented ImpactBuying PowerChain, a Blockchain Platform, to create lot level traceability for Fairtrade, climate neutral bananas. The implementation targeted the supply chain from plantation through the importer to the PLUS distribution centre in the Netherlands, enabling consumers to retrieve journey and certificate information via QR code on PLUS channels.
The ImpactBuying PowerChain deployment captured provenance and certification records and incorporated CO2 calculations as part of the trace data set. Configuration emphasized lot and batch level ledger entries, certification attestations, and consumer facing proof-of-origin content, aligning functional capabilities with typical supply chain and traceability workflows for food products.
Integrations were explicit and material, with fruit importer Fyffes providing lot inputs into the chain and Climate Neutral Group supplying the CO2 calculation data used to mark bananas as climate neutral. PLUS surfaced provenance and certification details through QR code lookups, linking the distributed ledger records to consumer engagement channels and in store traceability experiences.
Governance and operational changes focused on instituting chain of custody attestations at the point of lot handoff, embedding certificate issuance and CO2 data into the ledger, and adapting intake processes at PLUS distribution to generate QR linked records. The implementation made provenance and certification visibility part of PLUS retail channels, while preserving traceability across the importer to distribution centre flow.
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Buyer Intent: Companies Evaluating ImpactBuying PowerChain
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