China Daily

Logistics makes shopping seamless in the new era

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

Logistics will play a critical role in fulfilling a seamless shopping experience in the era of the “New Retail”, experts said.

As merchants begin to lean more on omnichanne­l sales, retailers need to tailor how a product is purchased and delivered to meet customer demands.

A survey of the world’s leading retailers last November showed the top reasons for embarking on the omnichanne­l journey are to preserve a slice of the market share and improve customer loyalty.

The survey was conducted by US-based ARC Advisory Group in conjunctio­n with logistics consultanc­y DC Velocity.

Most retailers are looking for the simplest means possible to integrate the new platforms within their existing infrastruc­ture.

The study found that threequart­ers of retailers fulfilled orders from multiple channels through a single facility, laying a clear foundation of omnichanne­l practice.

In the survey, 86 percent said they took orders online

(including mobile) while 77 percent also said brick-andmortar, and 42 percent said they took orders from call centers and catalogs.

In terms of handling “last mile” deliveries, most merchants stick to the traditiona­l courier delivery services at 43 percent, followed by third-party logistics partners at 23 percent. But others are experiment­ing creative options, including deliveries made by store staff and dr ones.

In China, e-commerce companies are experiment­ing with omnichanne­l solutions by offering warehouse-to-home and stores-to-home deliveries through partnershi­ps and investment­sin offline super markets.

For instance, through its Cainiao logistics affiliate, an alliance of top Chinese shipping and courier companies, e-commerce giant Alibaba last year expanded its same-day and next-day deliveries from 50 cities to 200 cities.

According to a study by Goldman Sachs in March, Cainiao had ‘Fulfilment Centers’ dedicated to Alibaba’s Tmall online marketplac­e operating in 19 cities at the end of last year.

It runs three fresh food distributi­on centers in three major Chinese cities: Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. All of them support cold chain delivery of fresh food purchased on Taobao and Tmall to the doorsteps of Chinese consumers within 24 hours.

It recently upgraded the service by providing fresh, rather than frozen, imported Australian beef to the dining tables of residents in 12 cities in China. Cainiao said with its new technologi­es, meat can be preserved fresh between 0-4 degrees for up to 21 days.

Others are also making new moves on prompt deliveries. JD.com Inc has successful­ly used drones to deliver online purchases to rural shoppers, using unmanned aircraft for last-mile distributi­on.

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