How Amazon Returns Work - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

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Returns are a major headache for customers, and they drain companies of
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millions of dollars in unwanted inventory and extra labor.
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Returns create billions of pounds of waste and entire walls of shame in
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warehouses around the world.
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But Amazon is trying to change all of that.
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Where Amazon absolutely leads is in trying to be the easiest, the lowest
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friction return experience for the consumer and thereby win customer
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loyalty and increase customer purchases while they tackle some of these
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other big institutional infrastructure problems around returns.
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From robots to in-person returns, the world's most valuable company is
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redefining the returns process.
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And as e-commerce grows, smaller companies are finding ways to make money
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off returns. We wanted to find out how does Amazon process returns?
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And what's the company doing to protect the environment and its bottom
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line? Returns are by far the largest challenge to
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e-commerce, and I think to commerce in general for both retailers and
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manufacturers. As more consumer spending is shifting from in-store to
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online, it's really just exacerbating the size of the returns problem that
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we all have to deal with. Across the entire Amazon marketplace, you know,
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they now sell over 800 million products.
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So this is a scale that the world has never had to deal with before.
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There's even an annual conference devoted entirely to solving the problem
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created by returns, namely inefficient reverse logistics is a huge loss
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for companies,. In a traditional brick and mortar store we might have
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average return rates of 8 to 10 %.
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But in e-commerce, it's totally common to see 20 or 30 % of all purchases
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get returned. Forrester Research estimates that e-commerce will see $207
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billion worth of returns this year.
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Amazon is about half of all e-commerce, so slightly more than $100 billion
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dollars in returns happen in North America just with Amazon.
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So that's a huge expense.
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And the returns process matters to customers.
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According to data compiled by Invesp, 79% of consumers want free return
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shipping and 67% check the returns page before making an online purchase.
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All this has led to the current trend of free return shipping, which is
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now offered by almost half of retailers.
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Where the challenges is, is can you do it in a way where the unit
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economics don't kill you?
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The difference with Amazon is they have the scale and they've trained
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their investors to accept that in the beginning they may do things at a
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loss. What that gives them the flexibility to do then is to invent.
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They bring a lot of talent to the table and they figure out how to
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optimize and create efficiencies that will allow them to have the unit
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economics work to their favor and ultimately get those margins back.
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The complicated reverse logistics journey starts when you decide to return
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an item. Amazon gives you 30 days from the day you receive an item to
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bring it back or put it in the mail.
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Generally you get 30 days.
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And generally they give your money back and even include paying for
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shipping both ways, right?
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Which has inspired other companies to have to follow suit.
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And with every return, Amazon wants to know why.
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34 % say the size, fit or color was wrong.
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21 % say the item was damaged, broken or no longer functional.
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14 % say the item wasn't as described, 10 % simply didn't like it and 9 %
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changed their minds. Amazon sees on their scoring system that you're a
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customer that abuses the return policy.
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It is possible that they'll charge you a fee for that out-of-reason
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return, whereas for a good customer they might continue to offer that
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return for free. Whether a return is free also depends on the method you
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choose for that return. That menu is going to vary slightly depending on
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your geography and the item.
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A popular thing that they'll do is you put it back in the box, you seal
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the box and we'll send someone to your house to pick up the box and
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they're going to charge you for that option.
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If you live in a place where there's literally no other options, they may
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offer that for free.
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But in most cases, they're going to say, if you bring it to a UPS store,
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it's free. But for certain items where the reverse logistics costs way
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outweigh the potential value of the item, if you're not someone that
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they've identified as a return abuser, they very likely are going to tell
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you to just not worry about the return.
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The returns process is now so easy that customers have been caught gaming
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the system. One man reportedly scammed Amazon out of $370,000 by sending
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back boxes of properly weighted dirt instead of the returned products.
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Amazon has also banned customers who appear to be conning the system by
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making too many returns.
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In all, return fraud cost to the retail industry $18 billion in 2017.
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You have a secret credit score that says how profitable and how good a
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customer you are for that retailer.
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A particularly egregious and common version of this is there's a huge
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spike in TV sales the week before the Super Bowl, and there's a huge spike
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in TV returns the week after the Super Bowl, right?
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So increasingly your own behavior can impact the returns experience that
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you get. But even those items that are legitimate returns can create a lot
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of pressure, specifically on Amazon workers.
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For every package you return from your doorstep, there's a delivery driver
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who has to pick it up and get it started on that journey back to the
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warehouse. It's those boots on the ground that cost Amazon the most.
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As more of Amazon's overall volume gets shifted from UPS and the U.S.
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Post Office to Amazon's own delivery network, they're also able to handle
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a lot more of the returns themselves and the logistics of picking
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something up at someone's house and taking it back to the fulfillment
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center are actually harder and more expensive than the logistics of
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delivering something to the home.
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Amazon has one big way to relieve the pressure on its drivers and its
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bottom line: use you for the delivery.
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In July, Amazon expanded its partnership with Kohl's to allow items to be
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returned without a box at any of Kohl's 1,100 stores for free.
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If they have to go to 100 hundred consumers' houses and collect one box
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for a return, that's much more expensive than having those hundred
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consumers all go to one Kohl's.
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Kohl's needs traffic. Retail traffic is down.
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You've got to find a way to get people in the stores.
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They're now getting the Amazon customer into their store who then has
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money in their pocket after a return.
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It's a great opportunity.
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So far, Kohl's says results are promising.
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The net impact of the traffic and sales we're getting and then considering
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the support that we're leveraging.
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So in terms of the support inside of our stores, reverse logistics, all of
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that is expected to be a positive EBIT contribution for 2019.
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So we're early days, but we're highly encouraged and we do see this as a
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profitable venture for the company.
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If the cost of me handling the return, which by the way they're going to
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help pay for, is lower than getting another pair of shoes sold to the
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person walking in, then it's ultimately a net gain.
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In the world of Amazon partnerships, this Kohl's deal is almost unique in
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how favorable it is for both parties.
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According to data compiled by Invesp, 62 % of customers are more likely to
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shop online if they can return an item in store.
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With Amazon, you can also return items in person without a box to one of
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2,800 Amazon Hub locker locations, which can often be found at Whole Foods
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or college campuses.
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Depending on your location, you can also return items in person at UPS
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stores and a growing number of Amazon Books and Amazon 4-star stores,
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although this does sometimes cost a fee.
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Other retailers are trying to catch up with Amazon's in-store return
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options. Walmart has actually created a separate return line so that you
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don't have to wait in line behind other people trying to get Walmart
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service. Target has set up dedicated e-commerce space in the front of the
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store.
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at Nordstrom's Local stores in New York and L.A.
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you can now return items purchased online from other retailers like Macy's
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and Kohl's. And FedEx announced this month that consumers can now drop off
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their online returns at thousands of Walgreens stores and print their
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return labels in store too.
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UPS also unveiled a similar partnership this month, allowing pre-labeled
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returns at 1,100 Michaels stores in the U.S.
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Amazon and everybody else is constantly trying to enhance that user
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experience and figure out how do you best do that?
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But you still have the reverse shipping.
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You have to pay for that shipping to go back.
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You have to deal with the item itself.
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How do you file it away?
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How do you deal with it? This creates another big challenge.
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The reality is it often ends up in a place of limbo, a place that some
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retailers call the wall of shame.
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Sometimes we've seen it as high as like, you know, 50, 60 ,000 square feet
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of just all items that are just all returns, all mistakes, all the stuff
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in there. And we're talking about thousands of items.
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We sometimes talk about millions of dollars in inventory that is just
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sitting there and it's just costing them too much to try to fix that issue
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that they just push it aside.
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That's what happens. It's at the wall of shame where L.A.-based
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startup inVia says its 400 robots deployed in U.S.
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warehouses are making a big difference.
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The robots can be programmed to process returns in a way that's custom to
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the needs of a company. Customers would approach us and say, what can you
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do to just fix my wall of shame?
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That's what we want the most.
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So with our robots, as the items come back we're actually able to go in
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and file them away so we're taking away that pain point of moving the
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items back. InVia is now programming its robots with separate software
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entirely devoted to returns.
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For example, after Christmas, there might be a lot of Christmas returns,
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which nobody's probably going to order til next year.
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And we'll go file it away pretty far away.
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These robots are meant to offer competitors an alternative to Amazon's
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Kiva robots, which were used by stores like Walgreens, Staples and The Gap
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before Amazon bought Kiva in 2012.
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A major difference: inVia's robots can handle small totes up to 40 pounds,
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often carrying one individual item, while Amazon's robots move entire
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1000-pound shelves all at once.
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InVia says this more finite control helps cut down on one big reason for
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returns: the warehouse worker accidentally boxing the wrong item.
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We only present the person with one item.
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If you look at the Kiva case, you have a big rack with a bunch of items.
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There's a guided pointer that points you but you can still make a mistake.
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You know, you're trying to move these things in seconds.
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So with our robots, we only present them with one choice.
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So there's a very, very low probability that they'll make a mistake.
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Amazon says its Kiva robots are not used in areas that handle returns.
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InVia wouldn't disclose if it's been approached by Amazon about acquiring
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its robotic return software but did confirm it's been in talks with a lot
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of Amazon's competitors.
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So far inVia's robots are being used in Rakuten's U.S.
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warehouses and smaller companies like discount e-commerce retailer Hollar.
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Once returned items are sorted by human or robot, it can still be a major
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problem to find the best use or them.
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This can lead to a huge surplus of inventory, wasted fuel emissions and
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unnecessary packaging to handle it.
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In a nutshell, returns are hard on the planet.
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As much as five billion pounds of waste gets thrown away as a result of
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these returns that can't be resold.
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So to put that in perspective, that's 250,000 garbage trucks full of goods
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that people bought, half of which from Amazon, and then ultimately had to
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be thrown away because it couldn't be resold.
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The environmentally unfriendly disposal of unsold and returned inventory
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has made big news. Burberry famously revealed last year that it
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incinerated 28.6
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million pounds of unsold and returned products, a practice it's since
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stopped. Earlier this year it was reported that a single Amazon facility
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sent 293,000 products to a garbage dump in just nine months.
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And after a documentary found Amazon destroyed three million products in
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France last year, the country vowed to outlaw the destruction of unsold
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consumer products by 2023.
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That, of course, is an ecological disaster.
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What's super interesting, of course, is consumers are increasingly
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sensitive to that.
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Even when destroying the product is the best economic option, retailers
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are having to pivot away from that because consumers don't like doing
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business with these ecologically unfriendly companies.
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In response, Amazon launched a program called Fulfilled by Amazon
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Donations. Starting September 1st, donations became the default option for
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all sellers when they choose how to dispose of their unsold or unwanted
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products stored in Amazon warehouses in the U.S.
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and the U.K. And that's entirely a result of customer sentiment pivoting
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away from Amazon.
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According to Narvar's 2019 consumer report, 52 % of shoppers said they
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would go in-store to return items if it helped reduce the environmental
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cost of returns.
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Amazon also has a program called Amazon Warehouse, which sells renewed
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goods at a discounted rate.
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Another big tool Amazon has to help cut down on wasted inventory: a
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massive amount of data on customer behavior.
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They can look at information about you and and other folks like you, and
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they can then have, you know, their technology can make predictions that
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says, hey, this product, there's gonna be others that want it.
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There's demand for it. So if we get it back and we get it back in the
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region where it was shipped, we actually think we're going to be able to
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ship it to a buyer in that same spot.
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But then there's all that packaging waste created by returns, which Amazon
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is trying to reduce. Kohl's and the Amazon pickup locations generally are
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using poly bags and other kinds of containers when they aggregate all of
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these returns together to dramatically use less packaging.
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Amazon has also replaced many cardboard boxes with more lightweight
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plastic mailers, although these mailers aren't recyclable in curbside
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bins. It claims the plastic mailers have reduced packaging waste by 16 %
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and eliminated the need for more than 305 million shipping boxes in just
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2017. And last month, CEO Jeff Bezos pledged to make Amazon carbon neutral
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by 2040.
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While Amazon works to cut down the waste and high cost of returns, there's
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a whole other side to it: a growing market for companies and individuals
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that make money off returns.
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It's sort of a new business that kind of started from this e-commerce that
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nobody ever thought of.
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One example is a company called Happy Returns.
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It has 700 return centers at malls and inside stores where customers can
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come return items from about 30 popular online stores.
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Happy Returns gets paid by its retail partners to aggregate all its
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returns. Saving money on that last-mile delivery person who would
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otherwise need to make multiple stops.
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It claims to save e-commerce retailers 20 to 30 % on shipping costs.
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The store or mall also pays Happy Returns a fee, hoping the concierge
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service will bring shoppers into its stores.
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There's also a market of third-party companies that buy returns in bulk,
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repackage them, sometimes with added accessories, and resell them for a
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profit. So you can go to some of these third-party companies and and buy
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things that have been returned, kind of almost like a salvage process.
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And the really fascinating thing is some of that ends up back on the
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Amazon marketplace. There's also a growing number of companies
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specializing only in reverse logistics.
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GENCO, for example, was bought and rebranded as FedEx Supply Chain.
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It helps liquidate returned inventory by sending it to smaller markets
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like Brazil. It finds a market or place for donation for products that
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won't sell in the U.S.
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Think: the Super Bowl champions t-shirt of the losing team.
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And of course there are discount retailers like T.J.
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Maxx that buy returned and unsold merchandise in bulk and then market it
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up and sell it to consumers.
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So we should absolutely be paying attention to the returns market.
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And there's significant economic opportunities for companies that are able
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to help retailers with this problem.
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Meanwhile, Amazon itself is still working to make returns more profitable
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by making the process easier and keeping its customers coming back.
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Amazon is definitely not perfect at this whole returns process and there
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are places where other retailers might be more ecological or do something
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better. But on the whole, Amazon is driving a lot of the innovation in the
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returns market. So more so than reducing their costs, they're saying let's
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make it really easy and hassle-free for customers to return and that will
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make customers trust us more and more confident that they can buy from us
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instead of one of our competitors.