Business Standard

Amazon beefs up logistics to keep up with growth

Company scales up delivery system by 1.5-2 times ahead of Great Indian Festival sale

- ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D

With nearly a quarter of the 170 million products listed on Amazon India now being eligible for free and fast Prime deliveries, the retail giant is beefing up its delivery network to handle an “unpreceden­ted” load of packages, expected to be shipped during this festive season. Amazon has scaled up its delivery network by nearly two times. ALNOOR PEERMOHAME­D writes

With nearly a quarter of 170 million products listed on Amazon India eligible for free and fast Prime deliveries, the US retail giant is beefing up its delivery network to handle an “unpreceden­ted” load of packages expected to be shipped during this festive season.

Right from its massive warehouses to small kirana store partners, Amazon says it has scaled up its delivery network 1.5-2 times in anticipati­on of this year’s Great Indian Festival sale.

Amazon continues to make big investment­s in infrastruc­ture as it eyes a multi-year horizon for each large fulfilment or sortation centre, and isn’t worried about having underutili­sed capacity in the short term, it said.

“As the number of Prime customers as well as the selection under Prime has increased, if we want to deliver products in the same time or even less, we have to expand our fulfilment capacity. As the storage capacity has increased, so has the capacity of all the outbound lines,” said Akhil Saxena, vicepresid­ent, Customer Fulfillmen­t, Amazon India.

With Amazon is eyeing twofive times the order volume in the upcoming sale period when compared to last year’s event, the company says its capacity expansion is vital to maintain customer satisfacti­on. An excessive logistics capacity will help in handling the peak load during the sale.

In a recent visit to Amazon’s newest fulfilment centre on the outskirts of Bengaluru, Saxena pointed out the empty lines would be full during the four to six weeks of the festive sale.

While utilisatio­n would drop after the sale, by early next year overall order growth is

expected to rise to such an extent that the unit would be operating full steam again.

“Our transporta­tion capacity has doubled, our fulfilment capacity has gone up by 1.5 times, and this is over and above the large base we’d built over the last two to three years. Every single state and union territory of India has an Amazon presence and we deliver to every single pin-code either by ourselves or through our partners,” added Saxena.

While Amazon has continued to grow its logistics business, says Saxena, this has not come at the expense of the business the firm offloads to its partners. The number of orders managed by India Post and even small local entreprene­urs continues to grow, he claimed.

For instance, Amazon has grown the number of stores under its ‘I have space’ initiative to 20,000 from 17,500 last year, while third-party delivery stations have doubled from 350 to 700 in the same period. The ecommerce

giant says these partnershi­ps are invaluable for its business to grow in tier-II and tier-III markets, which already drive 65 per cent of the orders on its platform.

Amit Agarwal, vice-president and country manager at Amazon India, told Business Standard in an interview in June last year that half the company’s investment­s until then had gone into building its logistics network. Since then, Amazon has pumped in close to $1.5 billion in the country and is inching closer to the $5.5-billion investment commitment that Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos has made for India.

While Amazon does not disclose the number of Prime customers it has in India, industry analysts estimate that number to be slightly north of 10 million. For the past two consecutiv­e festive period sales, Amazon has said that the highest sold item on its platform has been its very own Prime membership­s.

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