A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce)
Heightened trends of e-commerce retailing have spurred online purchasing by consumers. As such, the final distribution of goods plays an increasingly vital role in the e-commerce logistics chain, especially so with rising consumer expectations and logistics constraints such as failed deliveries and...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-758342023-03-03T17:24:25Z A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) Pan, Hui Khuan Teo Chee Chong School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies Heightened trends of e-commerce retailing have spurred online purchasing by consumers. As such, the final distribution of goods plays an increasingly vital role in the e-commerce logistics chain, especially so with rising consumer expectations and logistics constraints such as failed deliveries and small- volume deliveries. This has incited greater challenges in the last-mile portion of the logistics chain where goods are moved from the last upstream segment of the logistics chain to the final delivery destination. This report studies the last-mile fulfilment of Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) e-commerce transactions. This is part of a set of three reports that seek to examine the last-mile e-commerce logistics environment of different business models including Business-to-Business and Business-to-Consumer e-commerce. The report identifies various trends in last-mile e-commerce transactions including crowd-sourced logistics and automation and analyses the operations of such delivery modes. Subsequently, via literature review and a survey conducted, challenges and expectations of consumers as buyer and seller were gathered. It was found that difficulties in arranging meet-ups, lack of transparency and delayed deliveries are significant factors in hindering last-mile logistics of C2C e-commerce transactions. Additionally, consumers valued convenience, reliability and low costs the most when choosing the last- mile delivery mode. Following which, prospects of various delivery configurations are evaluated based on the aforementioned criteria and the ability to target arising problems faced by C2C e-commerce consumers. The report also recognises the relevance of parcel types and logistics preferences in determining the suitability of delivery modes, in the perspective of a C2C setting. While delivery modes such as on- demand courier deliveries are fast, reliable and convenient, it may be considerably less attractive to consumers when transacting a low-valued item as delivery costs may take up a high percentage of the value of the item. Hence, consumers will need to balance their interests to determine the optimal choice of delivery mode. Bachelor of Science (Maritime Studies) 2018-06-18T13:24:13Z 2018-06-18T13:24:13Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75834 en Nanyang Technological University 68 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Engineering::Maritime studies Pan, Hui Khuan A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
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Heightened trends of e-commerce retailing have spurred online purchasing by consumers. As such, the final distribution of goods plays an increasingly vital role in the e-commerce logistics chain, especially so with rising consumer expectations and logistics constraints such as failed deliveries and small- volume deliveries. This has incited greater challenges in the last-mile portion of the logistics chain where goods are moved from the last upstream segment of the logistics chain to the final delivery destination. This report studies the last-mile fulfilment of Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C) e-commerce transactions. This is part of a set of three reports that seek to examine the last-mile e-commerce logistics environment of different business models including Business-to-Business and Business-to-Consumer e-commerce.
The report identifies various trends in last-mile e-commerce transactions including crowd-sourced logistics and automation and analyses the operations of such delivery modes. Subsequently, via literature review and a survey conducted, challenges and expectations of consumers as buyer and seller were gathered. It was found that difficulties in arranging meet-ups, lack of transparency and delayed deliveries are significant factors in hindering last-mile logistics of C2C e-commerce transactions. Additionally, consumers valued convenience, reliability and low costs the most when choosing the last- mile delivery mode. Following which, prospects of various delivery configurations are evaluated based on the aforementioned criteria and the ability to target arising problems faced by C2C e-commerce consumers.
The report also recognises the relevance of parcel types and logistics preferences in determining the suitability of delivery modes, in the perspective of a C2C setting. While delivery modes such as on- demand courier deliveries are fast, reliable and convenient, it may be considerably less attractive to consumers when transacting a low-valued item as delivery costs may take up a high percentage of the value of the item. Hence, consumers will need to balance their interests to determine the optimal choice of delivery mode. |
author2 |
Teo Chee Chong |
author_facet |
Teo Chee Chong Pan, Hui Khuan |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Pan, Hui Khuan |
author_sort |
Pan, Hui Khuan |
title |
A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
title_short |
A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
title_full |
A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
title_fullStr |
A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
title_full_unstemmed |
A study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
title_sort |
study of the last-mile e-commerce logistics (consumer-to-consumer e-commerce) |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75834 |
_version_ |
1759854431336136704 |