Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing

Retailing business thrives on the implementation of click-and-collect service as one of the main options for the online orders. The primary concern in this service of omnichannel practice is the costly picking operations while at the same time it plays the major role in customer satisfaction. The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fitri, Ulfa
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/54692/
_version_ 1848799066247397376
author Fitri, Ulfa
author_facet Fitri, Ulfa
author_sort Fitri, Ulfa
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Retailing business thrives on the implementation of click-and-collect service as one of the main options for the online orders. The primary concern in this service of omnichannel practice is the costly picking operations while at the same time it plays the major role in customer satisfaction. Therefore, the need to pursue an efficient picking configuration arises. To cope up with this issue, retailers convey the advantages of using the cross-channel fulfilment to serve the online demand. This study is oriented towards the formulation of a mathematical model to obtain the cost-optimal settings and configuration of picking operations for click-and-collect in omnichannel retailing. The Voronoi diagram approach is employed in the problem formulation to cluster the customer demand into hexagon region in a hierarchical facilities level. A suggestion regarding the degree of centralisation for picking activity has been made by incorporating three primary costs: picking cost, inbound transportation cost and the fixed cost for setting up picking and collection points. The result reveals the optimal order picking rate and order accumulation time in each level of centralisation for the picking facility with a predefined maximum tolerable distance for customers to collect the orders. Moreover, this output can be used to identify the attractive offers for customers which complement the needs of internal fulfilment operations. The result is further supported by the sensitivity analysis showing the pattern of behaviour changes on the optimal solution given various values of the model parameters. It is inferred that centralised picking configuration befits the operations when the maximum tolerable collection distance is low, the fixed cost is high, optimal picking rate is low and orders accumulation time is high. The study also highlights the comparison of fully decentralised, centralised and hybrid configuration which can be an insight for decision-making processes at the managerial level.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T20:29:45Z
format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-54692
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T20:29:45Z
publishDate 2018
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-546922022-11-21T15:57:32Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/54692/ Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing Fitri, Ulfa Retailing business thrives on the implementation of click-and-collect service as one of the main options for the online orders. The primary concern in this service of omnichannel practice is the costly picking operations while at the same time it plays the major role in customer satisfaction. Therefore, the need to pursue an efficient picking configuration arises. To cope up with this issue, retailers convey the advantages of using the cross-channel fulfilment to serve the online demand. This study is oriented towards the formulation of a mathematical model to obtain the cost-optimal settings and configuration of picking operations for click-and-collect in omnichannel retailing. The Voronoi diagram approach is employed in the problem formulation to cluster the customer demand into hexagon region in a hierarchical facilities level. A suggestion regarding the degree of centralisation for picking activity has been made by incorporating three primary costs: picking cost, inbound transportation cost and the fixed cost for setting up picking and collection points. The result reveals the optimal order picking rate and order accumulation time in each level of centralisation for the picking facility with a predefined maximum tolerable distance for customers to collect the orders. Moreover, this output can be used to identify the attractive offers for customers which complement the needs of internal fulfilment operations. The result is further supported by the sensitivity analysis showing the pattern of behaviour changes on the optimal solution given various values of the model parameters. It is inferred that centralised picking configuration befits the operations when the maximum tolerable collection distance is low, the fixed cost is high, optimal picking rate is low and orders accumulation time is high. The study also highlights the comparison of fully decentralised, centralised and hybrid configuration which can be an insight for decision-making processes at the managerial level. 2018-12-01 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/54692/1/Dissertation%20Final.pdf Fitri, Ulfa (2018) Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] Omni-Channel Order Fulfillment Click-and-collect
spellingShingle Omni-Channel
Order Fulfillment
Click-and-collect
Fitri, Ulfa
Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title_full Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title_fullStr Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title_short Optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
title_sort optimisation of cross-channel order fulfilment for click-and-collect practice in omnichannel retailing
topic Omni-Channel
Order Fulfillment
Click-and-collect
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/54692/