{"id":2667,"date":"2012-12-11T04:20:57","date_gmt":"2012-12-11T04:20:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/research-methodology.net\/?p=2667"},"modified":"2012-12-12T04:23:14","modified_gmt":"2012-12-12T04:23:14","slug":"delivery-systems-and-models-in-supermarket-industry","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/research-methodology.net\/delivery-systems-and-models-in-supermarket-industry\/","title":{"rendered":"Delivery Systems and Models in Supermarket Industry"},"content":{"rendered":"
To meet the high expectations of on-time delivery while keeping the delivery costs low, e-grocers need to use fairly advanced optimization techniques and information technology systems. \u00a0With every grocery retailer there is a flow of finished goods from its suppliers, then from the company to its customers. Grocery retailers also exchange and receive information which provides valuable data for the system.<\/p>\n
These include feedback from the marketplace in the form of customers\u2019 orders, customer reaction, and information on needs and wants; flows of information within the company that provide data in the form of inventory schedules, production schedules and so on as well as orders from the company to outside suppliers\u2019.<\/p>\n
From a standpoint the whole company and the market in which it operates can be deemed as a series of linkages and relationships, and the efficiency in which the company operates can be seen to depend on how well these connections work. Having a system that works smoothly at minimum cost, would possibly allow for the company performance to be high. However this is not always the case in practice where it is common to find bottlenecks and poor integration between different parts of this system, leading to disappointing results.<\/p>\n
There are various methods and systems that can be implemented by retailers and over the past years the big supermarkets tried to adopt centralised models but where quick to abandon them in the past decade once they realised they would struggle with being efficient. This excludes Ocado which remains at the other end of the spectrum. \u2018Ocado maintains that its centralised model will prove more efficient than the supermarkets\u2019 store-picking approach once it achieves a critical mass\u2019. The drawback is that Ocado might incur some difficulties if its tries to implement the hub and spoke system for the entire country. On the other hand Tesco is able to boast of 98 per cent coverage, thanks to its extensive store network \u00a0where it uses it own Lorries and trucks to collect, transfer and deliver.<\/p>\n