Return delivery or the return line.
In our readings for this week we discovered the amount of
investment a company like JC Penney is willing to make in order to stay
competitive in e-commerce. According to comScore in the fourth quarter of 2011
alone there was nearly $50 Billion in spending (a nearly $20 Billion increase
since the publication of the article on JC Penney and a $7 Billion increase
compared to the fourth quarter in 2010). [1] With such increases it appears
that JC Penney was right to invest, but who else is benefiting from such a
boom? Before we examine the answer, recall how the success of Zappos from last
week revolved around free shipping to the customer AND free return shipping if
the customer is not pleased with the product. This model has been replicated by
other businesses as onlookers witnessed the success of the model. Today many
companies offer the same service by default, to preferred customer, or as a
promotion. The result is increased shipping to and from customers, and a lot of
it.
Both FedEx and UPS projected large increases of return
shipping: 7.7% increase in January of 2012.[2] FedEx and UPS had to hire large
numbers of holiday workers to deal with increased shipping to customers and
then the return-shipping that ensues in January following the holidays. FedEx
hired 20,000, an 18% increase since 2010, while UPS hired 55,000 for a 10%
increase. [3]
The cost, therefore, of shipping has increased and
companies are becoming innovative at dealing with this. They are also
reinventing how the brick-and-mortar buildings are used. In our discussion a few weeks ago on IKEA, we
discussed how the customer is treated as part of the supply chain since they
pick up, deliver and build the products themselves. Similarly, a few big
players are starting to augment their showrooms as extensions of e-commerce.
For example, companies like Apple, Nordstrom, Best-Buy, Macy’s, Sears and even
Walmart have transformed their stores in to “web return centers, pickup
locations, free shipping outlets, payment booths, and even drive-through
customer service centers for online sales.” [4] Nordstrom even allows
“customers to search an individual store’s inventory via the web,” so that they
can find a product, buy it, and pick it up.[5] This insures that that rare brand
or specific size will be available the minute you arrive at the store.It looks like the IKEA and Zappos models have taken off.
Questions:
How do you think that the cost of this increased shipping is
paid for? Do you think that retailers eat the cost or is it passed on to
consumers?
If you think that it is passed on to consumers, does this
mean you are less willing to pick up a product that you purchased online at a
store?
Do you think that e-commerce numbers will level out or is
there still growth potential?
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