For years, retail visionaries have been calling for legacy retailers to prioritize digital transformation and technical disruption in their business, and ignore at their own peril. Given that the industry is in constant flux, and instituting a truly unified omnichannel experience comes with a slew of complexities, it’s no surprise that some retailers have lagged behind. With the COVID-19 crisis, retailers have found themselves in another state of upheaval—one that demands those who are lagging to catch up or risk losing their business.
Customers have dramatically shifted their shopping experience to digital channels, and their expectations for service options have not waned during the pandemic. With inventory scattered across stores, retailers must implement omnichannel capabilities like BOSS and BOPIS to meet the changing needs of customers’ new normal.
Ultimately, omnichannel retailing is about meeting customer demands anywhere (through multiple touchpoints) and in they way they want. We have outlined some best practices for BOSS and BOPIS below:
By following the steps above, you can improve customer satisfaction through higher fill rates than if you shipped from the warehouse alone. During COVID-19, some of our clients fulfilled up to 40% of their orders from stores that were otherwise closed, due to limited access to DC inventory due to COVID restrictions, but by implementing BOSS and BOPIS,
Before implementing your BOSS or BOPIS initiatives, it is important to take a few things into consideration.
Picking and shipping in the store is typically twice the cost of doing so from a centralized DC, because stores are organized for shopping, not batch picking processes, and product is generally more spread out than a DC with pick bins. Retailers should expect higher shipping rates when implementing BOSS unless negotiated within an enterprise logistics contract.
For both BOPIS and BOSS, high retailer cancel rates can cause serious customer defections. To prevent this, we recommend retailers are conservative with how low they sell store inventory to ensure they can fulfill the orders at a 95+% rate. Additionally, you must be very astute and resilient in managing the channel conflict that arises when selling items from a retail store to online customers. While we always advocate “saving a sale” and servicing the customer, the store assortment needs to be maintained at a level where customer still find it appealing to shop there.
Before the pandemic, BOSS and BOPIS were well on their way to having a growth spurt in 2020, and the pandemic accelerated the rate of change. We don’t know what new customer behavior will stick around once pandemic lockdowns are lifted, but it’s clear that BOSS and BOPIS are here to stay. Newmine has assisted several omnichannel retailers in implementing BOSS and BOPIS as retailers continue to become more and more unified in their commerce capabilities—some initiatives completed in as little as 2 weeks.