March 4, 2014
The nation’s leading home improvement retailer is no stranger to e-commerce, but its efforts to offer a more robust omnichannel experience took a major step forward recently with the opening of the company’s first direct fulfillment center.
The approximately 1 million sq. ft. facility less than an hour south of Atlanta in the community of Locust Grove is the first of three new direct fulfillment centers Home Depot plans to build in the next two years. The other two facilities, strategically located in Perris, California, and Troy, Ohio, will stock more than 100,000 items, which are capable of being shipped to 90% of zip codes in the United States within 48 hours.
“We tried to look at it from the customer’s perspective of how they want to be supported instead of designing a facility based on how we want to support customers,” said Scott Spata, Home Depot’s VP of distribution. “These facilities are designed for same-day order picking and they will also allow us to experience out of stocks less often.”
In addition to accelerating shipments to customers and more reliablle in-stock levels, Spata said the DFCs combined with a network of more than 2,000 stores will help the company more effectively satisfy shoppers’ expectations for a seamless experience. Currently, about one third of Home Depot’s e-commerce volume results from shoppers who buy online and have their goods shipped from DFCs to stores, or shoppers who buy online and pick up goods that are already stocked at the stores.
An even more extensive assortment of more than 500,000 items is available from what Spata called the long tail of the Home Depot’s product offering. While the company can satisfy the majority of shoppers’ needs between the 35,000 items in stores and the 100,000 items in DFCs, a more extensive assortment is available from the company’s vendor-direct program.
“It is a seamless experience for the customer,” Spata said, referring to orders placed on HomeDepot.com that are fulfilled directly by suppliers.
To further develop its omnichannel capabilities, Home Depot expects to pilot this year ship-from-store capabilities and refine the processes on how products ordered online and returned to stores are returned to distribution centers or made available for sale. “Buy online, return in stores has been an absolute homerun for customers,” Spata said.
However, those items are then accumulated in stores for shipment back to the DFC since Home Depot doesn’t allow non-store SKUs returned to stores to be sold in stores. That may change over time as the company’s e-commerce volume builds, but for now the approach involves leveraging back haul capabilities and the creation of regional reclamation centers to more efficiently process returns.
While Home Depot has considerable work ahead to execute its omnichannel vision, the company has enjoyed tremendous e-commerce growth. About the time the DFC opened last month, Home Depot CEO Frank Blake reported the company’s U.S. stores produced a 4.9% comp increase and e-commerce sales grew by 50%.
“Our online customer satisfaction scores improved as we continued to enhance the experience across our full site, mobile and tablet and we’re seeing accelerated improvement in our conversion rates,” Blake said.
Those metrice are poised to improve going forward as the company integrates its new DFC into the supply chain and takes the locations in California and Ohio online.
Source: Retailing Today