Blue Yonder Sees Retailers’ E-Commerce Revenue Rising by 33% Amidst
COVID-19
December 7, 2020
New research reveals major fulfillment challenges are continuing for retailers
given the rise in e-commerce as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Blue Yonder’s
Future of Fulfillment Research Report conducted in October 2020, revealed that
retailers saw e-commerce revenue as a percentage of total revenue increase by
33%, and 27% of retailers added fulfillment centers to meet this shift. However,
the survey found that many retailers are still challenged by stock availability,
profitability ,visibility and accuracy, as well as labor scarcity and a lack of
fulfillment automation.
The research report, to be released in two parts, analyzed responses from 300
senior executives across retail and e-commerce with responsibility for logistics
and fulfillment operations in the U.S.
Micro-Fulfillment and Large Fulfillment Centers Surge as E-commerce
Revenue Rises
Retailers are expanding their
logistics network with more fulfillment and micro-fulfillment
centers to meet the surge in e-commerce orders and customer
preferences. Drug store/health & beauty retailers, and grocery
retailers in particular increased the number of fulfillment centers
to meet e-commerce needs than other vertical categories.
- Retailers surveyed saw
e-commerce revenue as a percentage of total revenue increase by
33% from before the COVID-19 lockdowns to today.
- Since March, more than a
quarter (27%) of retailers increased the number of fulfillment
centers in their logistics networks, and half (50%) have centers
dedicated to e-commerce order fulfillment.
- Roughly three-quarters (71%)
cited that they expanded their logistics network to meet
increased e-commerce demand and nearly half (46%) cited that
they needed to be closer to the consumer to reduce cost to
fulfill and enable delivery speed and convenience.
- 41% of drug store/health &
beauty retailers and 40% of grocery retailers increased the
number of fulfillment centers to meet e-commerce needs and
maintain a consistent customer and brand experience - more than
any other vertical.
- Despite the recent rise in
the use of micro-fulfillment centers amongst certain retailers,
only 15% of all retailers surveyed claimed to have leveraged
micro-fulfillment centers in their logistics network.
“The explosion of e-commerce
orders, in conjunction with consumer expectations for rapid
fulfillment, has resulted in an unprecedented need for more digital,
automated fulfillment solutions,” said Ed Wong, senior vice
president, Global Retail Sector, Blue Yonder. “Retailers, especially
those in essential goods, are ramping up their online fulfillment
operations and footprints to meet growing customer expectations and
to better position inventory more strategically. While this is a
short-term solution, they must consider how to profitably manage
this growth in e-commerce revenue in the long term. That is where
automated back-end commerce and fulfillment solutions, coupled with
machine learning-led demand planning solutions on the front-end, can
ensure retailers are most profitably meeting these demands.”
Out-of-Stocks Continue to Persist
Amidst Demand Spikes
Stock availability, social
distancing and worker scarcity continue to challenge retailers.
-
More
than half (51%) of retailers cited out-of-stocks as their
biggest fulfillment challenge driven by the pandemic. Inventory
accuracy is critical, along with the ability to view enterprise
and third-party vendor inventory across locations and suppliers.
- This aligns with recent
consumer research
from Blue Yonder that found 55% of consumers are currently
stockpiling because they want to avoid the issue of
out-of-stock products.
- Maintaining mandated social
distancing practices or safety protocols (36%) and worker
scarcity (34%) were other prominent challenges that retailers
cited. Social distancing has propelled traditional brick and
mortar retailers to adapt by offering curbside, pickup and
contactless shopping experiences.
- Grocery retailers were
more likely to cite out-of-stocks (66%) and worker scarcity
(43%) than any other product category.
- Drug store/health &
beauty retailers were also more likely to be challenged with
maintaining mandated social distancing practices or safety
protocols (43%) than any other product category.
- When it comes to the last
mile of the supply chain, most retailers stated they are
struggling with increasing delivery costs (54%) and reliable
order fulfillment (36%).
A Clear Need for More Automated,
Orchestrated Omni-Channel Fulfillment
- Only 29% of retailers rate
their current order management solution as ‘excellent’ for
meeting omni-channel fulfillment needs, citing a big need in the
market for more intelligent solutions to help predict and
fulfill demand vs. existing DOM solutions
- When managing product
assortment to meet demand spikes, nearly 40% of retailers stated
they were forced to manually prioritized high demand SKUs to
maximize production capacity.
- Only 14% of retailers stated
that their fulfillment locations are automated today. Notably,
nearly half of retailers (49%) who cite all revenue is from
e-commerce have automated fulfillment locations today.
“Traditional DOM approaches are
dead. As retailers grapple with the new reality of shopper
convergence on one shopping channel – e-commerce – they must also
expand automation, inventory accuracy and real-time visibility, as
well as order promising intelligence to profitably get products to
customers on time,” said Eugene Amigud, group vice president,
Product Management, Blue Yonder. “Retailers must go beyond
traditional order promising to advanced, omni-fulfillment
capabilities embedded with automation and artificial intelligence to
instantly pivot, adapt and refocus to deliver the personalized
experience consumers expect – all critical to success.”
|