Retailers maintaining both an online presence and a physical storefront can accrue significant advantages by offering customers the option of collecting their items curbside or at a dedicated location inside stores. Here, we will review the steps to take and the pitfalls to avoid to ensure a successful BOPIS implementation. We will answer a range of questions involving this expanding service offering:
Implemented properly, BOPIS is a seamless conduit for funneling customers between online and in-person shopping channels. Shoppers get the best of both worlds while retailers synchronize and integrate more ways to maximize customer value. BOPIS and its related strategies such as BOPAC (buy online, pick up at curb), BORIS (buy online, return in-store), and ROPIS (reserve online, pick up in-store) expedite deliveries, simplify returns, and alleviate the special challenges presented by last-mile fulfillment.
As the name implies, BOPIS and its spinoffs require both an online catalog or eStore and a physical location. While most often this physical component is a store open to the public for in-person shopping, it can also be a dark store or distribution center. Here’s the basic process:
Retailers are adopting BOPIS at breakneck speed. According to a Forrester report BOPIS sales accounted for 62% of all retail transactions globally in 2022. This proportion is expected to rise even further in the coming years – potentially reaching 70% by 2027. The reason is simple: They are responding to customer demands for convenience, savings, and transparency. Many have also realized improved economies and productivity as BOPIS has allowed them to more efficiently allocate their resources.
Mobile commerce will account for 70% of total retail sales by 2027.
Retailers can delight their customers by providing BOPIS services that outperform pure in-store shopping and/or ordering online. Customers appreciate the many ways BOPIS saves them money, time, and hassle:
Retailers constantly search for ways to integrate their customers’ online and in-person shopping experiences. BOPIS makes the process easier by actually ushering consumers between critical channels and empowering a unified digital marketplace that generates complementary, cohesive branding, messaging, imagery, and customer experiences to generate trust, loyalty, and evangelism.
As if meeting customer expectations weren’t enough, BOPIS delivers tangible benefits retailers can use to cut costs and save efficiencies:
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With all these advantages, why haven’t all retailers already implemented and scaled BOPIS as part of their digital offerings? OneView Commerce has identified two primary reasons. First, many retailers face the constraints of their legacy tech stack infrastructure that blocks an efficient and engaging BOPIS experience. Two, offering BOPIS alone does not automatically transform digital engagement. Challenges must be solved:
Many retailers face the constraints of their legacy tech stack infrastructure that blocks an efficient and engaging BOPIS experience
Having a scalable and resilient modern in-store tech stack is important for overcoming many of these challenges. Not only can it help make every aspect of your business more efficient, it also improves the quality of service delivered to your customers. A cloud-native architecture is perhaps the most fundamental component in solving these problems. Whether it involves managing shifts in customer behaviors or addressing supply chain fluctuations, resilient backend systems are critical to deliver the brand experiences that drive loyalty and profitability..
The scalability of cloud architecture is critical when responding to fast-evolving markets and new modalities. Businesses should pay close attention to how they can meet the needs of their customers by modernizing their systems to gain greater agility and control. Digitally transforming in-store systems is the key to improving your customer experience by providing additional convenience, a higher degree of relevance and improved quality of service.
As an example, a department store offers a buy online pick up in store solution. As customers begin to use this new option for checkout, they enjoy the convenience that it provides. As a result, more people begin to use the service, but the underlying technologies are not built for scale meaning the additional load on the system can affects critical operational points like inventory accuracy, team workloads, and more. Retailers who use an extensible, unified commerce approach instead of a bolt-on point solution will find they have the technical and functional architecture to ensure the store is equipped to respond to fast-moving changes in customer demand.
As noted above, retailers need to embrace a modern technology stack just to efficiently consider joining the BOPIS game. Of course, to integrate online ordering with in-store pickup, the company needs both channels to be operational. Many modern unified commerce systems offer easy integration to link an eCommerce storefront that allows retailers to quickly offer online order creation. The physical location of BOPIS is the real key to a satisfactory experience. While the location could be anywhere, you will need a location conducive to storing inventory and making it easy for employees to find, pack, and stage for handover to customers. As volumes increased over the last year or so, many retailers utilized dark stores or customer fulfillment centers to increase pickup volume without creating a negative experience for in-store shoppers.
An inventory reservation system tied to inventory management will help retailers avoid order confusion and customer alienation. What you tell people you have available for same-day pickup must truly be available. And the first person to buy it online must be the one for whom it is earmarked. Customers disappointed by not receiving an item reported as in-stock may not return.
Customers also may stay away if their order is handed over late, incomplete, or contains damaged items. You must ensure sufficient and well-trained staff, or even more efficient robotics-driven options, to fulfill all orders, inspect them for accuracy and quality, and make sure they are ready for pickup at the appointed time.
Employing several options for serving BOPIS customers and allowing them to retrieve their online purchases shows retailers are going the extra mile. It would be nice if you are a retailer with hundreds or thousands of stores giving customers a multitude of options to designate which store is preferred for any order. But single locations can offer item lockers, over-the-counter, curbside, or other options that can help ensure a positive experience.
For digitally driven retailers who go all-in on BOPIS, training and assigning dedicated staff members on order fulfillment, supervision, and management creates specialized skills that make the process run smoothly. That focus means customers will know the retailer does not take their loyalty for granted or treat BOPIS as an afterthought.
For more information on implementing BOPIS as part of a modern unified commerce solution including point-of-sale, inventory, and distributed order management and promotions, visit OneView Commerce. OneView can demonstrate how retailers harness the power of a headless, unified commerce transactions engine to build, scale, and integrate digital to physical experiences.