يحاول ذهب - حر

Cutting LastMile Delivery Costs

Winter 2025

|

MIT Sloan Management Review

New tactics can boost profitability and satisfaction with subscription services.

- Stanley Frederick W.T. Lim

Cutting LastMile Delivery Costs

Costco and Amazon subscription services were just the beginning. Consumers can now subscribe to a pickle-of-the-month club, monthly shipments of coloring books, bimonthly boxes of survival tools, and more. Traditional subscription services, such as newspaper or milk deliveries to people’s homes, have been around for decades. But subscription-based home delivery services have become increasingly ubiquitous for other categories of physical products as well.

Subscriptions offer considerable benefits for companies, predictable cash flow chief among them. But for those that deliver physical goods to customers’ doors, the biggest challenge is last-mile delivery costs that eat away at profits. While subscription-based businesses aren’t the only ones that deal with last-mile costs, they are uniquely vulnerable to these costs and in the best position to reduce them.

Last-mile expenses can account for up to 53% of total supply chain costs, as failed deliveries and higher fuel, vehicle, and labor costs strain the system. Another reason expenses are so high is because it’s difficult to optimize logistics for small orders that must be delivered to many different locations, often within a short window of time. Reducing these costs could make the subscription model much more profitable, but most companies haven’t found effective ways to lower them — even though the recurring nature of subscriptions makes this easier than it is under other business models.

I’m a researcher who studies logistics and supply chain management and has worked with companies in South America, Southeast Asia, Europe, and the U.S. to cut operational expenses using cost-effective strategies such as improved delivery routing and scheduling. Based on my research and experience, I believe that a more effective solution exists. But first, let’s take a closer look at the problem and the strategies companies are using today.

Encourage (or Require) Bigger Orders

المزيد من القصص من MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Formalize Escalation Procedures to Improve Decision-Making

Conflict is inevitable. A systematic approach to escalation helps organizations manage disagreements efficiently and make better decisions.

time to read

11 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

A New Method for Assessing Circular Business Cases

Conventional business analysis overlooks the costs and new revenue sources found in circular approaches.

time to read

11 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Building Innovation Teams Across National Borders

Restrictive immigration policies are forcing multinational enterprises to rethink their R&D strategies. Here are four approaches to maintain innovation excellence with geographically dispersed teams.

time to read

14 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Strategic Alignment Reconciles Purpose and Profitability

Sustained performance requires a company purpose that is validated in the market.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

The Hidden Costs of Coding With Generative Al

Generative Al can boost coding productivity, but careless deployment creates technical debt that cripples scalability and destabilizes systems.

time to read

6 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

Aligning Strategy and Skills

\"DO WE HAVE THE PEOPLE WE need to successfully execute our strategic plan?” That’s a perennial middle-of-the-night worry for business leaders.

time to read

1 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

Should You Recruit New People, or Upskill Your Workforce?

I worry that we don't have the skills in-house that we need to seize future opportunities.

time to read

2 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

The High Cost of Executives' Intellectual Property Blind Spots

Strategic business decisions often involve intellectual property, but senior managers' understanding of salient issues is often limited.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

How the EU's Taxonomy Combats Greenwashing

The European Union's criteria for identifying green activities can be a better guide than standard ESG measures.

time to read

7 mins

Fall 2025

MIT Sloan Management Review

MIT Sloan Management Review

A Data-Driven Approach to Advancing Meritocracy

Instead of simply relying on best practices, employers should adopt a talent management strategy that addresses bias and inequity while ensuring efficient, fair, and merit-based decisions.

time to read

16 mins

Fall 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size