Xerox Corporation used benchmarking extensively to improve its business operations and processes in the face of intense competition from Japanese companies in the 1980s. Through benchmarking, Xerox identified factors like higher manufacturing costs, lower quality, and inefficient supplier and inventory management processes compared to competitors. Xerox then implemented changes like reducing the number of suppliers, adopting just-in-time practices, optimizing inventory levels based on usage, and focusing on continuous improvement. As a result, Xerox saw significant benefits such as lower costs, higher customer satisfaction, and improved financial performance. Benchmarking became fully integrated into Xerox's management systems over time.