eCommerce Archives - 6 River Systems https://6river.com/category/ecommerce/ 6 River Systems is the new way companies fulfill. Sat, 29 Apr 2023 18:18:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 The expert’s guide to e-commerce fulfillment https://6river.com/guide-to-e-commerce-fulfillment/ Fri, 14 Oct 2022 08:39:31 +0000 https://6river.com/?p=9038 Technology is such a constant force for change that we tend to look at new technological innovations as almost normal ...

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Technology is such a constant force for change that we tend to look at new technological innovations as almost normal — or at least par for the course. But the fact remains that technological advances are regularly disruptive to old methods and approaches.

If your business is going to keep pace with its competitors in such a rapidly changing world, it’s going to need to embrace and integrate as much technological innovation as it can.

In e-commerce, fulfillment is the bridge between your product and your customers. Without it, your inventory stays on the shelf, and your customers look elsewhere to get what they need. In a lot of ways, your fulfillment strategy, and the way you execute that strategy, is the sum total of your customer experience.

Therefore, fulfillment is a vital part of a business’s operations.

But just as there are many different businesses and products, each situation requires a different fulfillment strategy. You need proven solutions that can scale, and you need them to be efficient, accurate and reliable.

In this expert’s guide to e-commerce fulfillment, we’ll cover:

This guide will primarily look at fulfillment through the e-commerce lens and deal mostly with third-party logistics (3PL) fulfillment methodologies.

What is e-commerce fulfillment?

E-commerce fulfillment has several layers to it. It all centers on customer service — you have a customer online who decided to buy something your business makes or sells. The ecommerce fulfillment process is how it gets from you to your customer. It involves:

  • Inventory management
  • Receiving
  • Warehousing
  • Pick and pack
  • Shipping
  • Returns

Those first three steps involve how the various components of your products — and your customers’ orders — are assembled and readied for picking and shipping.

Picking and packing is the process in which a customer’s order is put together. If they have one item, it’s easy. If they have many items, these will need to be selected from different zones of the warehouse and placed together in a shipping box.

Shipping isn’t as easy as it might sound. Some items can and should be sent through parcel delivery services (typically for B2C shipments, but not always). Other items that are heavy or bulky must be shipped via freight, and that requires access to a whole different network of specialists.

The last step, returns, is not often well-enough integrated into many small businesses’ fulfillment strategies. If products are damaged, whether in transit or not, or if the wrong item was shipped, you need to have a way to deal with the discrepancy properly. That means implementing a returns putaway process as well as a process for disposing of, recycling, or refurbishing products that can’t be resold in their current state.

This capacity isn’t just about customer service, either — it’s about inventory management. You need a process that focuses on returns for inspections, confirmations and restocking because any inventory that’s unaccounted for can’t serve your business. With a documented returns process in place, you can recover the value of returns quickly.

When you sell your goods online, it’s not the same as a location-based, brick-and-mortar customer experience. By doing away with a physical location, you’ve given up the possibility of providing a face-to-face customer experience. The customer experience now hinges entirely on how flawlessly your e-commerce fulfillment strategy works.

The three main types of e-commerce fulfillment

Warehouse associate conducting e-commerce fulfillment activities

There are three primary strategies in the fulfillment business:

  • In-house
  • Drop shipping
  • 3PL

1. In-House Fulfillment

In-house fulfillment or self-fulfillment is the strategy that requires you to keep all fulfillment tasks and responsibilities under your own company’s roof (or under your company’s direct management and control). It’s great for startups and small businesses, but it can be difficult to scale.

2. Drop Shipping

If you decide to build your fulfillment strategy around drop shipping, you won’t stock products in a warehouse. Instead, you will effectively sell another company’s products to your customers via your e-commerce store, while the drop shipping company manages both warehousing and shipping for you.

The upside is that you don’t need to fret about order fulfillment. This approach may be a good option for small businesses or entrepreneurs first getting into the e-commerce space. It can also be a viable strategy for growing e-commerce businesses that want to expand their product lines to offer more SKUs but don’t have the capacity to keep fulfillment tasks in-house.

3. 3PL

The 3PL model involves outsourcing your fulfillment to a third-party logistics specialist. This company will manage your warehousing, packaging and shipping. With a 3PL strategy, you can provide your customers with a fully integrated experience from checkout to delivery (and returns).

Inventory management techniques

Inventory management covers everything from ordering and storing materials, parts, and products to how you move your inventory throughout your warehouse, how you track it, and how efficient the whole process is. Naturally, this procedure invites all manner of disciplines as companies strive to find the best solution for their own challenges.

It used to be perfectly adequate to use a written ledger and a pencil to track warehouse inventories. Then again, it also used to be just fine to spend way too much time picking and packing orders manually. If you want to compete with e-commerce’s movers and shakers, you need a better way to get things done.

And these days, there isn’t just one way to get the job done. What’s right for one operation could be dead wrong for another. This introduces the need for customized solutions. Let’s delve into some of the most common inventory management techniques.

Bulk management

Conventional wisdom says that it’s least expensive to work in bulk, whether you’re talking about purchasing or shipping. And for the most part, this is true — although not always.

If you’re dealing in high-demand commodities like copper, building materials, minerals (such as salt), or consumables, the bulk technique of inventory management is best. Bulk management can also be used to provide zones within your warehouse for staging large quantities of non-commodity items, whether inbound or outbound.

The point is that bulk management isn’t just for commodities; it’s better thought of as a management technique for large quantities of inventory. The petroleum, building and food industries effectively put this principle to work. The biggest and best have scaled it to a global level, and their practices are worth studying for insights.

Know before you commit, though, that going bulk will require a lot of warehouse space, and the longer your inventory sits, the more it will cost you.

ABC inventory management

The ABC inventory management technique involves assigning a priority to a particular item or class of items so that they can be expedited. Usually, the criteria are threefold:

  • Annual units sold
  • Inventory value
  • Cost significance

With this method, it’s possible to forecast, to a certain point, how items in your inventory are performing relative to others. It’s also possible to adjust pricing based on these performance indicators.

However, this method often misses the first indications when an item or class of items begins to trend upward, which could lead to understocking and missed opportunities.

Backordering

This technique can be risky. If you enable backordering, you don’t have physical products on hand, yet you’re still taking payment for it. You’re leveraging the time value of money, among other things, in order to bank revenues so that you can shift production when possible.

Fulfilling all backorders at once could have certain efficiency advantages, but you’re taking customers’ money and goodwill in exchange for a promise. Don’t keep them waiting long.

JIT (Just in Time)

Pioneered most notably in the automotive industry in the turbulent 1970s, the just-in time-inventory technique is extremely efficient because of its inherent leanness, but it tends to create completely unforeseen problems.

If all of your necessary raw materials are unloaded one truck at a time every couple of hours — and one shows up late because of a traffic snarl — you may not be able to process customer orders due to something as seemingly insignificant as a random motorist’s flat tire.

JIT can also fail when it comes up against global supply chain disruptions. For instance, the pandemic of 2020 left many parts of the supply chain reeling from unprecedented shortages caused by either total or rolling shutdowns, depending on the industry. The automotive computer chip shortage is a well-known example of how disruptive it can be when one piece of the JIT chain fails.

Consignment

With consignment, you’re basically using a retailer’s floor space as warehousing. The benefit to the retailer comes from not having to tie up cash flow in inventory. It’s a great way for producers to test new products. But the downside is that your products enter a kind of limbo. If they’re returned unsold, you’re paying for shipping twice.

Cross-docking

A close relative of the JIT technique, cross-docking means all you’re doing is sorting the cargo of one truck into another. Even on the dock, the freight is never not in transit.

The best example of this technique in action can be seen in firms like UPS and FedEx. An inbound trailer bumps the dock and is unloaded and sorted on the dock into three or four disparate outbound trailers, which are loaded and released immediately.

Inventory cycle counting

This technique works best when implemented in conjunction with other methods. The idea behind it is to increase efficiency and decrease downtime by not performing a full inventory reconciliation (or stock check) unless you absolutely must. Inventory cycle counting is a random sample of stock taken on a random basis. There are three primary ways it can be used:

  • The control group technique counts the same items often in a short timeframe.
  • The random sample technique attempts to spread count activities throughout the inventory in the warehouse so that disruptions are minimized.
  • The ABC cycle count technique counts high-priority items more often than those with lower priorities.

In reality, the best inventory management technique for your eCommerce business will likely blend all these techniques to some extent, and could even integrate others, such as a year-end audit.

How automation helps

Autonomous mobile robots (Chucks) in a warehouse aisle

Given the various wrinkles in the space between you and your customers, it can be difficult to know how to best unravel everything into something that works well for you. After all, one of your primary goals is to ensure customer satisfaction and reduce risk. Because without customers, your bottom line suffers, and you don’t really have a business.

The dream is to find a solution that allows you to do the job better than your competitors and, if possible, anticipate what’s required of you in every aspect of the transaction. Little efficiencies gained here and there add up to huge advantages.

Warehouse automation can help, especially when it’s enhanced with AI. Here are just a few ways autonomous mobile robots are taking warehouse logistics to the next level:

  • They’re flexible, optimized and easily scalable.
  • They offer improved productivity in the warehouse.
  • Onboarding and training can be streamlined.
  • Data analysis gives a much better picture of inventory and efficiency metrics.
  • Decisions are systematically directed by intelligence, not guesswork.
  • Exponential improvements over unaided workflows lead to rapid ROI.

Let’s take a closer look at these advantages.

Optimization and scalability

When AMRs (Autonomous Mobile Robots) are deployed into the warehouse, all kinds of hidden efficiencies can be realized. Since the software that guides each AMR is able to “see” every order as well as the position of every other AMR, it is possible to gain greater efficiencies through system directed workflows.

For instance, instead of picking an individual order until it’s filled, AMRs can direct an associate efficiently, fulfilling multiple orders at once. Instead of pushing a cart through every aisle on the hunt for items, associates can now stay in a zone, picking onto AMRs as directed. This means less walking for people and more efficiency for picking.

Additionally, these solutions are easily scalable. If you need more capacity, simply add more AMRs to the mix. And since the whole process is guided by the AMRs as they move through each zone, it’s quick and easy to train new staff.

Improved productivity

When people spend less time figuring out each customer order, trying to remember where each given item is, and roving the entire warehouse trying to pick one order, it results in a significant increase in productivity and efficiency.

Improved productivity means you’re getting a whole lot more for your money. By employing AMRs, you let the AI choose the most efficient way to pick customer orders. Not only are your employees more efficient because they’re following the system, but your system responds in real-time as orders stack up. This is crucial when high throughput needs to be maximized, such as during peak seasons or make-or-break moments like Black Friday and Cyber Monday (BFCM).

Streamlined employee training processes

If the worker’s tasks are simplified, onboarding is easier too. Imagine how much time it would take a new hire to get their feet under them if they had to memorize, even roughly, your entire warehouse. Then imagine how easy it would be to simply allow an AMR to guide them to their next pick.

The hefty average cost for onboarding one new hire in 2022 is $4,125. Therefore, anything that can be done to streamline employee training is a boon to your bottom line. AMRs enable huge gains in onboarding efficiencies just by performing their everyday functions.

Data analysis

With automation comes data, but you have to know how to use it for it to actually mean anything. Data integration is crucial. It’s not that you have the data; it’s what you can do with those data. A great deal of anxiety and busy work in management strategies will disappear when you have proper data integration.

You won’t have to worry about whether cross-docking will work or if an ABC inventory cycle count will be adequate when you have good, hard data. Mispicks and inaccurate inventory counts will be reduced if the whole process is automated.

Plus, since AMRs are guided by AI, you’ll get real-time, actionable feedback about areas in the warehouse that suffer congestion, and you can proactively troubleshoot ways that you can alleviate the problem.

Decisions guided by intelligence

Instead of guesswork, your decisions will be highly data-driven. You won’t need to wonder which item is selling best right now or has for the last six months or year-to-date — you’ll know. No longer will you need to worry about whether you have a clear picture of your inventory, either, or hope that you have enough stock to cover a trending item.

Since every move made in your warehouse can be tracked and analyzed by your WMS (warehouse management software), and since every component of every order shows up in the system, you can easily track what’s selling and what’s not. And that means you can pivot to what matters when it makes the most difference.

Fast ROI

Since warehouse automation adds efficiency to your entire operation — from inventory accuracy to staffing to picking errors and everything in between — it won’t be long before automation pays for itself.

Your return on investment probably won’t just come in the form of efficiencies gained but also in the form of growth enabled. And if anything, that means you’ll have an edge on your competition.

The future of e-commerce fulfillment

Fulfillment logistics technologies in e-commerce tend to move quickly. It’s those who fail to capitalize on today’s potential advantages who will be left behind, and sooner than later.

The e-commerce landscape is dotted with the wreckage of those who tried but failed to innovate in time and were eliminated.

What are you missing that could make a difference in fulfillment efficiency? Have you considered how AMRs and the automation they bring could increase margins, decrease loss from mismanagement, and bring more market share to your corporation by increasing your agility in the marketplace?

In the end, there’s really only one conclusion: fulfillment is a primary example of a business task that’s begging to be automated. When your warehouse is automated, it is:

  • More efficient
  • Highly accurate
  • Data-rich
  • Easily scalable

In the end, automation gives you an edge over your competition. And that’s priceless.

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Scaling up for peak fulfillment this season https://6river.com/scaling-up-for-peak-fulfillment-this-season/ Tue, 05 Apr 2022 19:57:02 +0000 https://6river.com/?p=8570 It’s never too early to start thinking about peak preparation. Especially if your business experiences several seasonal spikes throughout the ...

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It’s never too early to start thinking about peak preparation. Especially if your business experiences several seasonal spikes throughout the year. While most retailers tend to be hyper focused on Black Friday and Cyber Monday (BFCM) sales pushes, other businesses handle fluctuating volume more frequently. These companies need to be able to scale up quickly to meet customer demand.

We all saw the shift from shopping in-store to online during the pandemic. And although e-commerce sales grew 14.2% in 2021, this growth is more on par with pre-pandemic levels as consumers are returning to in-store shopping. Omnichannel retailers must find a balance to support both in-store and online customers as shopping habits continue to change in 2022.

To be prepared for peak this year, it’s time to evaluate processes, from hiring seasonal labor to managing accurate inventory, in order to prepare for periodic spikes in fulfillment.

Flex labor to meet demand

Retailers need to add seasonal labor more often than the one time holiday sprint. This can be extremely difficult because not only is labor already scarce, but reliable labor is even harder to come by. Finding and hiring labor outside of “traditional peak” can be even more challenging. According to a recent survey by Modern Materials Handling, 60% of respondents said there were “too few candidates to interview”. This begs the question, how do you fulfill more orders with less labor?

To increase productivity and meet peak demand, operations should consider automating the picking (and replenishment) process. Speeding up fulfillment provides a competitive advantage, and enables your business to meet service level agreements (SLAs) such as same or next day delivery.

There are several technologies on the market, so when labor is hard to come by, make your existing labor force more efficient with tools that will enhance their job performance. For example, implementing barcode scanning to confirm picks will increase order accuracy. In addition, autonomous mobile robots can help attract, train and retain employees. By directing an associate directly to a pick location, the risk of human error is reduced and productivity increases, which means more orders going out the door.

Stay ahead with “just in case” inventory

Keeping inventory organized will help ensure more accurate inventory counts. With supply chain disruptions unexpectedly interfering with inventory availability, stocking additional Just In Case (JIC) inventory might be the way to go this season. Another consideration though is end of season turnover. After each season, sporting goods stores must liquidate or deeply discount products to free up storage space. To reduce the financial impact this has on an operation, be sure to look at historical data to find the sweet spot. The right amount of inventory on hand will help you avoid “out of stock” messages and can provide a competitive advantage against those less prepared.

Timing is everything. Another way to stay ahead is to consider fulfilling orders directly from stores to end users. Connectivity throughout all store locations and fulfillment warehouses will provide inventory information across your entire operation. This reduces stock outs and ultimately improves customer satisfaction.
Data Dashboards at Liberty Hardware

Customer satisfaction is the ultimate goal

To keep customers coming back for more, retailers will need to provide excellent customer service in 2022. Therefore, getting orders out the door quickly and accurately is a necessity to earn repeat business. Additionally, meeting or exceeding delivery expectations and offering alternatives for pick-up such as curb side and buy online pick up in store (BOPIS) can attract new customers.

As order volume increases, so do returns. Operations need a solution to ramp up both order fulfillment and replenishment to keep up. Automation will not only benefit your business in the off season, but it will enable you to scale up quickly to manage the influx of customer orders and potential returns as well. Technology offers flexibility and scalability to meet the changing needs of your business. Using technology and labor together, will enable you to pick and putaway faster than labor alone.

Partnering with a warehouse fulfillment solution provider allows you to design your picking strategy to be flexible and scalable when you need it. Deploying autonomous mobile robots, increase efficiencies in your entire warehouse, starting with your labor force. Moving from picking to packing to putaway, AMRs can lead the way to faster fulfillment. Get ready for peak fulfillment with 6 River Systems!

 

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5 supply chain management tips for retail for sustained profitability https://6river.com/supply-chain-management-tips-for-retail-for-sustained-profitability/ Wed, 19 Aug 2020 11:48:04 +0000 http://6river.com/?p=6018 Today, anyone can start a retail business with a couple of clicks on a laptop from a café. Companies with ...

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Today, anyone can start a retail business with a couple of clicks on a laptop from a café. Companies with billions of dollars in valuation, like Shopify and BigCommerce, help to reduce the barriers of entry to the world of e-commerce. Manufacturing companies have the option of selling directly to consumers without the help of any retail middle men. Whether you are new in the retail space or an established player, what you cannot build with a click of a button is a strong brand or an efficient supply chain. These are the two factors that are essential for the long-term sustainability of any retail business, and achieving them requires implementing smart supply chain management tips and strategies.

5 supply chain management tips for retail for sustained profitability

A white paper published by DHL found that inefficient handling of supply chains causes high costs, wasted resources, and reduced agility. It is evident that supply chains are a cost driver for a retail business, and the efficiency with which supply chain is handled will determine whether the business will generate a sustainable profit or go under. Here are five supply chain management tips for the retail industry to bring in sustainable profits.

1.  Implement automated ordering

Except for the rare brand like Supreme, which thrives on product scarcity, shoppers are not thrilled to encounter out-of-stock products. It hampers the brand image and leaves money on the table, which isn’t desirable for any business, especially in the retail business where alternatives are readily available for the consumer. Automated ordering alleviates the pressure on supply chain executives and also can take care of triggering replenishment orders automatically. Since every business is connected with technologies like ERP software, it is easier to implement such solutions and have the complete supply chain adapt readily to demand shifts.

2.  Leverage big bata, analytics and optimization

5 supply chain management tips for retail for sustained profitability

Supply chains were driven by numbers and statistics for a long time. Quantifiable performance indicators were always considered key metrics by supply chain executives. With the technology available today, companies can track goods from raw materials to the final products, even after the purchase cycle is complete and the products are delivered to end consumers.

When dealing with this volume of data, tracking and analyzing data using an Excel spreadsheet is not realistic, as billions of data points can be created every minute. According to a report by the American Productivity and Quality Center (APQC), investing in data analytics is a top priority for supply chains.

With big data analysis techniques, companies have the power to harness unstructured data and extract useful information out of it. Data that once would have been discarded can now be put to use, revealing avenues for optimizing the supply chain at an unprecedented rate. 36% of supply chain executives say that analytics is the top instigator for optimizing their inventory to balance supply and demand. Modern big data analytics tools are user friendly and have strong visualization tools to assist users in gleaning actionable insights from raw data.

3.  Automate warehouses and distribution centers

Warehousing is one of the important drivers of cost in the retail supply chain. There are plenty of opportunities to increase the profitability of a retail business through efficient warehousing. A lot of manpower, machines and systems are involved in the operation of a warehouse. Inefficiencies in any of these areas leads to an increased risk of errors and can create a bottleneck in the supply chain.

Order picking comprises 55% of the operational expenses of a warehouse, so reducing picking errors and improving order picking efficiency are obvious strategies when boosting profitability is the goal.

There are many levels of automation solutions available for warehouses. Amazon was a pioneer in warehouse automation, and today, there are many automation solutions within reach for any business. Collaborative mobile robots like Chuck by 6 River Systems are an intuitive and cost-efficient system that can integrate with your existing warehouse layout and offer faster ROI compared to traditional automation solutions, such as conveyor systems. For example, one leading 3PL implemented 6 River Systems’ solution within three months and achieved a full ROI within 18 months, with a 25% improvement on picking accuracy. In another case, a global retailer saw a 62% increase in pick rates within just three months after implementing 6 River Systems’ collaborative mobile robots solution while also reducing picking errors — at a fraction of the cost of traditional automation.

4.  Develop a cohesive strategy

5 supply chain management tips for retail for sustained profitability

The supply chain of a retail organization cannot function as a stand-alone organization. It has to work side by side with marketing, sales, finance, operations and other departments. One of the most important facets of supply chain management is demand planning. The sales and marketing departments provide the data necessary to develop an accurate model for predicting future demand, which in turn impacts supply planning. Similarly, other business functions are mutually dependent on the supply chain function.

It’s not just the departments within the company, but vendors, suppliers and distributors are also key elements of a supply chain. The success of each entity is dependent on the strong relationships built with its partner organizations. Supply chain management must be a collaborative effort with all company departments and partners, so breaking down information and communication silos is a top priority for supply chain executives.

5.  Consider 3PL solutions

Building an end-to-end logistics operation is cost-prohibitive and time-consuming, so many retailers turn to 3PLs. From behemoths like DHL and FedEx to regional 3PL players, there are many third-party logistics (3PL) providers that specialize in everything from warehousing and distribution to transport and last-mile delivery.

Leveraging a 3PL is a viable strategy to increase the profitability of your retail business. Many retailers find it more cost-effective to leverage 3PL solutions, particularly as their businesses grow and the retail logistics demands become too significant to manage. Utilizing the services of a 3PL allows retailers to focus their internal resources on the company’s core competencies.

These five supply chain management tips can help your retail organization achieve greater sustained profitability. By making smart investments in systems and solutions that can drive better decision-making and automate key business processes, retailers can boost productivity and efficiency for a healthier bottom line, both in the short- and long-term. To learn more about how collaborative mobile robots can help retailers address top fulfillment challenges, download our white paper, The Business Case for Collaborative Mobile Robotics.

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