Miami Herald (Sunday)

When we return items purchased online, they sometimes just end up in the landfill

- BY GAD ALLON Los Angeles Times

As the world pays new attention to supply chains, the focus has been on delays in delivering products to stores and consumers. We’re mostly scrutinizi­ng the “forward supply chain,” the path from raw material to the customer.

But the other side of the supply chain — the process of returning a product — also plays a significan­t role. Many goods that firms work hard to bring to the United States will be sent back soon after they are delivered.

Across all e-commerce, about 30% of purchases are returned and about half of all clothing is sent back.

While the forward supply chain enjoys economies of scale at every stage, the reverse supply chain — the complicate­d act of retrieving a product from a customer — is costly and inefficien­t.

A 2019 investigat­ion brought transparen­cy to the return process. It was conducted by the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Co.’s watchdog program Marketplac­e and the Basel Action Network, an environmen­tal advocacy group. They purchased a dozen products from Amazon Canada and returned them, hiding a GPS tracker in each one.

They found many returns took a circuitous route, often covering several hundred miles — sometimes even thousands — before reaching their final destinatio­ns.

Toy blocks traveled 590 miles before being delivered to a new customer in Quebec, and a printer was hauled 620 miles while circling around southern Ontario.

Of the 12 items returned, only four had been resold when the story was published. The rest were still in transit months after their being returned. At least one, a new backpack, was found in a landfill. Amazon didn’t respond to questions for the report about what percentage of its returns are sent to landfills.

Soon after the report aired, Amazon introduced a program in the United States and the United Kingdom dedicated to helping sellers send returns directly to charities instead of landfills.

Amazon has plenty of company. A quarter of the online products returned end up being discarded, according to ReturnGo, a firm I advise that tries to help retailers improve their return processes.

Why are firms so wasteful in dealing with returns? Health and safety regulation­s are one reason. For instance, it is considered unsanitary to resell certain items, such as beauty products and swimwear. H&M will not accept swimwear if the hygienic seal has been opened.

But the more prevalent reason is reverse logistics, the side of the supply chain that moves goods from customers back to the sellers or manufactur­ers.

Less than 10% of products are returned to brick-and-mortar stores. In the early days of e-commerce, people were reluctant to buy clothing and shoes online given concerns about sizing and fit. After Zappos disrupted the shoe and clothing industries by offering long return windows without any restrictio­ns on the conditions of the product, most other retailers were quick to follow — and the lenient policies led customers to change their purchasing behavior.

Customers now return products at random times and in small batches. They are shipped to various places based on product type, sorted and stored until a decision is made on whether to resell them. It’s a time-consuming process that has little value.

Accepting a product and preparing it to be shipped back is viewed as a nuisance, so not much thought has gone into making the process more efficient.

In a recent survey of 1,000 adults, more than 50% of online shoppers said they avoid retailers with strict return policies while almost 55% reported making online purchases knowing they were likely to return at least some of the items.

Several ventures are trying to help firms manage their return process. ReturnGo uses an analytics-driven solution so firms can make return decisions informed by logistical costs and customer lifetime value. For example, for certain products, the advice would be to let a loyal customer keep the product and get a refund, if the cost of shipping it is higher than its resell value.

Another solution is mixing the online and offline retail experience. For example, 44% of respondent­s in the online shopping survey said they still prefer to return an item in person, which can help firms reduce shipping costs.

The same survey showed that 57% of customers returning an item would still shop from the same merchant even if they had to pay shipping costs to make a return. And with the pandemic interferin­g less with in-person shopping, traditiona­l stores can serve as a return center and as they were originally intended: a place to try to find the most suitable products in person.

The current supply-chain crisis is exposing more and more inefficien­cies — such as long delays at ports and massive shortages for some products. Given the uncertaint­y around shipping dates and product availabili­ty, people may be over-ordering and returning more than usual after the holidays.

So, during your holiday shopping, do your part to stem return culture by choosing carefully — and aiming to buy for keeps.

Gad Allon is faculty director of the Jerome Fisher Program in Management and Technology at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

©2021 Los Angeles Times

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