Giant e-tailers like Amazon and Zappos have forever changed the retailing landscape. Consumers expect and demand maximum convenience, lower prices, a wide array of merchandise to choose from, and the ability to get products quickly. With the increasing pressure and fight for market share, more and more traditional retailers are implementing the ‘omnichannel’ model to provide customers the best of all worlds. As these retailers endeavor to seamlessly and efficiently meet the needs of customers at every stage and every touchpoint in the retail process, their supplier partners must support them in order to remain competitive.
A survey recently conducted by Retail Systems Research cites cost effective shipping and fulfillment as one of the top three operational challenges for large retailers. Many retailers are turning to drop ship—a process where vendors ship products directly to customers—to help solve this challenge and create efficiencies.
A well-executed drop ship solution can convey significant benefits to both retailers and suppliers:
By demonstrating advanced drop ship capabilities, a supplier can become even more attractive to retailers, giving the company a competitive edge. Plus, drop ship can dramatically increase product distribution and even segue into a stronger presence in retailers’ brick-and-mortar locations.
Although drop ship offers suppliers extraordinary opportunities for growth, this fulfillment method also entails its own unique challenges and compliance guidelines for suppliers. The good news is, with the right tools and partnerships, suppliers can overcome these challenges and realize the immense possibilities.
Suppliers need specific, key, high-volume capabilities to adhere to retailers’ drop ship guidelines in a cost-efficient and time-saving manner:
For retail suppliers, drop ship is not just the wave of the future—it’s happening now, and those who excel in direct-to-consumer compliance will come out on top of the game.