Retail fulfilment: no longer a back-room concern

Sometimes you have to stop looking at something the way you always have and consider it from a completely different perspective.

On one hand the question of why delivery is so important in retail seems laughably obvious; a customer buys something so you have to deliver it to them, right?

Well, yes, of course. But if you want to be a true multichannel success, you have to stop looking at fulfilment as being a purely transactional operation and start thinking like a customer.

Perhaps 15 years ago there were still plenty of people nervous about online retail – can I trust this website, will I get what I think I’ve bought, will I get anything at all..? But, by now, online sales and ecommerce are well-established, accounting for 20% of UK firms’ turnover.

In the main, such concerns no longer exist in great numbers; online shopping – especially in the UK – is widely accepted as safe and secure. According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), four in five Britons made at least one online purchase in 2014, and ecommerce sales in the UK have shot up 66% between 2008 and 2013.

Add into that the growing number of shoppers for whom online is the norm, and for whom direct physical contact with the retailer is becoming less and less frequent.

The chief consideration for multichannel retailers, where fulfilment is concerned, is that the point of delivery is the point at which you will be judged on your ability to keep your promises.

If you made it easy for me to spend my money with you, did you also make it easy for me to receive (and if necessary return) my purchases?

Did you offer me a range of delivery and collection options that fit with my life or do you expect me to have to accommodate the delivery company?

commerce delivery options

Speed of delivery is still the most obvious consideration for many, but in survey after survey, convenience trumps speed.

Next-day home delivery is great if I know I’m going to be at home the day after I place my order. But what if I’m not? Can you send my parcel to a collection point near me, or will I be fishing it out of my wheelie-bin later that evening?

Will you be able to notify me that my parcel is going to arrive at a particular time, so that I can still go about my day and be sure to be in when the courier turns up?

Delivery

Or am I going to have to go to a sorting office on Saturday morning to queue up for ages to get my parcel, which was delivered on the next-day?

Retailers and carriers alike need to optimise their fulfilment operations so that the needs of the customer are prioritised. Some already do, and despite the massive investments involved, they are likely to form a breakaway group of class-leading retailers and carriers, offering great services built around great customer service and convenience at every stage.

A good example of this is Sainsbury’s, which performs well for the delivery promises it makes for both grocery and non-food products.

It stands out for one-hour timed delivery slots and for a market-leading returns policy that offers a full refund for up to 12 months on non-perishable items, while a partial refund is available after 12 months.

Getting delivery right means customers have options – brands and traders that are perceived as flexible and accommodating win more sales.

Those who don’t may have to find partners they can collaborate with to get over those hurdles they’ll never clear alone. Failure to do so could result in them being part of a group that can’t compete on service and can only compete on price.

Best practices, key trends and discussions of multichannel fulfilment will be seen this 27th and 28th April at the eDelivery Expo (EDX16), at the NEC Birmingham.

 

Ian Jindal is an experienced multichannel retailer and Editor-in-Chief of InternetRetailing

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