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The increasing popularity of online shopping makes Internet
retailing a megatrend that cannot be ignored. The collaboration of
two co-authors bringing academic rigor and broad consulting
experience into the mix, Internet Retail Operations: Integrating
Theory and Practice for Managers offers enduring insights on
operational issues and principles for the management of internet
supply chains. Covering a range of emerging issues supported by a
variety of case studies, the book details the evolution of
information technology's role in retail supply chain networks, its
impact on supply chain networks, and how this has changed service
operations. It addresses information technology in relation to
service and retail industries, then explores how supply chain
dynamics impact traditional service and retail delivery, the costs
involved, and customer satisfaction and loyalty. It includes
tables, vignettes, and graphs that make the content practical and
relevant. As you will learn, many attempts at internet retail do
not succeed, some because they fail to appreciate the fundamentals,
others may have simply been ahead of their time. Many years of
experimentation and growth lie ahead. Drawing equally on theory,
research results, and real-world experience, the book provides
strategies for overcoming the challenges of building operations
capability in the evolving world of Internet retailing.
Omni-channel retailing (OCR) strategies have recently emerged as a
powerful engine of growth in the retail industry. The goal is to
provide consumers with a seamless and consistent shopping
experience across different channels and devices. Success in
implementing OCR strategies depends on sophisticated compromises
between fulfilment responsiveness and product variety across
different product types, consumer segments, and shopping occasions.
Failures in OCR strategies to optimize the trade-offs between
responsiveness and variety are rooted in a poor understanding of
how OCR strategies should build on last-mile supply network (LMSN)
distribution configurations. This book addresses this issue by
developing a typology of LMSN distribution configurations in OCR.
Typologies are useful for four reasons: (1) They provide a
mechanism for incorporating holistic principles of inquiry into
organizational research. (2) They explicitly define patterns of
constructs that determine dependent variables while enabling
researchers to move beyond traditional linear theories. (3) They
provide a means to incorporate equifinality. (4) They establish
connections between the findings of various studies. The existing
literature covers a number of last-mile typological systems in the
supply chain. However, these typologies do not provide a
satisfactory characterization of various forms of LMSN distribution
configurations in OCR and their unique structure, product/order and
information flow, service architecture, and relational and
governance aspects. To address these deficiencies in the
literature, this typology updates the linearly "chain-centric"
extended supply chain models developed previously and provides a
framework that integrates multiple theoretical domains and
terminologies that have been used disjointedly to describe the
various forms of LMSN distribution configurations in OCR. After an
introduction, Section 2 presents a review of the literature.
Section 3 describes the methodology used to identify the different
configuration dimensions and provides definitions of the
terminologies. Section 4 describes the LMSN configuration-based
typology while Section 5 presents LMSN evolution patterns through
the discussion of example cases. Section 6 highlights key insights
derived from the typology, elaborates on academic implications, and
suggests some research extensions. Section 7 discusses the
managerial implications and concludes.
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