-
BLACKOUT TECHNOLOGIES TARGETS TELEMATICS-INTEGRATED MOBILE DEVICE BLOCKING TO COMBAT SMARTPHONE DISTRACTION - April 1, 2025
-
OpenADR Alliance announces first OpenADR 3.0 certified products with EVoke Systems, E.ON Energy and Universal Devices - March 25, 2025
-
Growing fulfilment and contract packer appoints new Managing Director - March 25, 2025
-
When is it time to invest in a WMS? Understanding the key trigger points - March 25, 2025
-
eCapital helps Vantage Recruitment on its journey to financial success - March 24, 2025
-
Hugo Beck Celebrates 70 Years of Packaging Innovation with Open House Events - March 20, 2025
-
PROLOG FULFILMENT SUPPORTS LUNA DAILY’S COMMITMENT TO BETTER BODY CARE FOR ALL WOMEN - March 19, 2025
-
Motion Ventures launches largest-ever maritime tech fund at $100M to meet the industry’s new pace of adoption - March 18, 2025
-
ITD GLOBAL APPOINTS GROUP CHIEF REVENUE OFFICER - March 17, 2025
-
SURECAM TEAMS UP WITH ENTERPRISE FLEX-E-RENT FOR VEHICLE REPAIR & MAINTENANCE CONFERENCE - March 14, 2025
Throw-away lines
ITV News recently broadcast a report that was highly critical of the online giant Amazon for ‘destroying millions of items of unsold stock every year,’ writes Charlie Walker.
At Amazon’s Dunfermline warehouse, according to ITV News, ‘products that are often new and unused are thrown into vast bins, carried away by lorries and dumped at either recycling centres or a landfill site.’
The products had never been sold, or were ‘returns’ – goods that had been sent back to the warehouse after the purchaser had decided that they were not suitable.
‘Almost all could have been redistributed to charities or those in need,’ opined ITV
Products end up being destroyed in this way, for the simple reason that the longer the goods held in an Amazon warehouse remain unsold, the more the vendor company is charged for storing them. So, it eventually becomes cheaper to dispose of them than it is to continue storing the stock.
Third party logistics (3PL) services companies can play a key role when it comes to ensuring that their clients’ losses from stock returns, obsolescence or deterioration are minimised.
For example, effective and ongoing stock management routines will allow a 3PL to highlight any stored lines that are approaching their ‘best before’ dates in time to enable the client to find a buyer before it is too late.
If the 3PL has contacts within the market in which its client operates, it might even be able to help identify an outlet for some ageing stock. Walker Logistics, for example, works with a number of companies in the cosmetics space and when one recently faced the prospect of being stuck with a significant quantity of non-saleable merchandise we were able to introduce the client to a major discount retailer and a deal was agreed for the sale of the goods.
And, with, for example, more than 30 per cent of all the clothing ordered online estimated to be returned, it is essential that retailers and their logistics partners have efficient networks in place to process inventory as it comes back to the business.
Of course, while asset control procedures will reduce the need to destroy goods, factors such as production or packaging errors, product recall or, simply, a product’s failure to sell, will sometimes make destruction and disposal unavoidable.
Walker Logistics offers comprehensive and secure destruction services with audit trails and all the relevant paperwork that demonstrate that products have been disposed of in the most ethical and environmentally friendly way.
All companies should strive to avoid unnecessary waste, but it is easy for a kind of ‘disposal culture’ to creep in to a business. By flagging up any stock that is nearing it’s sell-by date and delivering the same kind of efficiency when it comes to processing returns as we do when getting new orders out of the door,
Walker helps clients steer clear of literally throwing away their profits.
Charlie Walker is head of marketing at Berkshire-based online fulfilment and third party logistics solutions specialist, Walker Logistics.