Reverse logistics
Reverse logistics is the process of routing failed-delivery and refused orders (RTOs) from the carrier back to the merchant\'s warehouse for inspection, restocking, or disposal.
Without a planned reverse logistics flow, RTO packages stack in carrier warehouses, paperwork piles up, and items go missing. By month two of a poorly-run operation, a non-trivial percentage of stock has drifted into a \"lost\" state.
Good reverse logistics caps the number of unsuccessful delivery attempts (typically 2-3), then auto-routes the package back to the destination warehouse. On arrival the item is inspected: resellable items return to inventory; damaged items are logged and either disposed of per merchant policy or shipped back to origin.
The single biggest reverse-logistics improvement comes from running it as a defined SOP from day one — not bolting it on after the first RTO crisis.
Return to Origin (RTO)
Return to Origin (RTO) is the percentage of cash-on-delivery orders that never reach the customer or are refused at the doorstep — the package returns to the warehouse instead of being delivered. RTO is the single largest cost driver in COD e-commerce.
Last-mile delivery
Last-mile delivery is the final leg of the shipment from the destination warehouse to the buyer\'s doorstep — the most expensive, most failure-prone, and most-customer-facing step in the e-commerce logistics chain.
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