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Achieving Higher Order Fill Rates Through Integrated Channel Order FulfillmentBy Paul Sobota |
The majority of companies we consult with on inventory management projects are taking a very conservative approach for this year’s Fall and Holiday seasons; they will pass up sales rather than be significantly overstocked. Do you really want to “lose the sale” because an item is not available for direct order fulfillment, or you can’t get it conveniently to your customer?
Potential Solutions
Here are some ideas you can consider for achieving channel synergy, with resulting improvements in fill rates, customer service, sales, and profitability.
Explore Filling Direct Orders From Stores
Your first priority should always be to have optimal inventory available in the fulfillment center; it’s the lowest cost way to serve the customer. However, when that fails, you’ll want to “save the sale”—and the idea of filling customer orders from retail stores isn’t anything new. What is new is the ability to automate store fill allocation of customer orders with a variety of user-defined business rules. Systems that do this are either batch or on-line integrated to the retailer’s merchandising systems, plus they place affordable systems in the stores for order fulfillment. Here are just a few examples of retailers that have implemented somewhat different solutions from two vendors.
MICROS-Retail Locate’s Order Broker module has system controlled business rules that determine where a product can be picked and shipped from. Prior to Order Broker a user had to manage all the decisions. Order Broker has decision rules for checking to see if there is a PO that will come in within days, the location that has the most inventory, and stores which are not available for picking (for example, a new store).
The StoreNet order fulfillment process allocates orders and publishes them to stores based on user defined rules such as inventory availability, safety stock levels, proximity to the customer and store preference setting. At the store, a salesperson prints pick tickets for allocated orders. Inventory is picked from the store and staged for packing and shipment. Picked inventory quantities are confirmed in StoreNet, which produces packing slips and shipping labels for confirmed items. When a carrier picks up the package, a ship confirmation triggers an update to the order management system for billing to the customer.
At the heart of store fulfillment systems like these is a user controlled set of complex business rules taking into account saleable inventory quantities, safety stocks, overstocks, newly allocated orders, split shipment rules, proximity to the customer, and more.
What Are the Benefits?
We believe such “save-the-sale” concepts can create a marked increase in customer retention and satisfaction, and drive retailers’ top line revenue. They allow you to maximize e-commerce sales through expanded product selection (and size and color availability), impacting the growth rate of e-commerce sales compared to store revenues (less foot traffic, more click traffic). They increase your ability to reach new customers with store merchandise, while making you more efficient at selling down corporate-wide inventory—hopefully at full price. Efficiency is also increased through elimination of store-to-store calls and transfers, with reduced manual effort. Second package shipment costs are offset by closer proximity to the customer. With stores able to go on and off store fulfillment by the user defined business rules—rules that can also give credit to the store salesperson for filling the order—turf battles over inventory are lessened.
At a time when inventory is lean, this approach can maximize sales and customer satisfaction, with business rules that give you the flexibility you need.
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Paul Sobota is a vice president of F. Curtis Barry & Company, a multichannel consulting firm specializing in systems selection and implementation, inventory management and fulfillment. Paul can be reached at 804-740-8743 or psobota@fcbco.com. Learn more online at http://www.fcbco.com.
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