Shipping Partners in the EU for Kickstarter Reward Fulfillme

A lot has changed in the last 10 months in terms of EU fulfillment options (the same goes for Australia and Asia, which Ill write about soon in a separate entry). Several companies and services have been created specifically for the purpose
A lot has changed in the last 10 months in terms of EU fulfillment options (the same goes for Australia and Asia, which I’ll write about soon in a separate entry). Several companies and services have been created specifically for the purpose of fulfilling Kickstarter orders in the EU.
 
The great thing about these companies is that they’re a lot more user friendly than Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.de. Overall I’ve been very pleased with Amazon’s customer service, but it’s the difference between learning this extremely complex, nuanced system (at Amazon) versus exchanging a few e-mails with someone at one of these smaller companies.

Experienced.They cooperated with lots of freight shipping companies out there, but I can’t say enough good things about OTX. They are amazing to work with, very communicative, great rates, and they understand the priority on speed for Kickstarter creators. I specifically work with PFC, who previously managed a lot of freight shipments for us through a different company

Quantity: I’d like to continue to dispel the idea that these solutions are only for big companies with thousands of orders. It’s kind of a self-defeating prophecy: If you don’t offer EU-friendly, cost-effective shipping options on your Kickstarter project, you probably aren’t going to get many backers in the EU.

Pricing: Please remember that if you offer “free” shipping anywhere (i.e., to backers in the US), what you’re really doing is building $x into the reward price. So when you determine the shipping fee for other backers, you need to deduct $X from that fee because it’s already built into the reward.

Here we'd like to recommend PFC Express Fulfillment service for you.Here are the features:



1. Seasonal Flexibility

At the time of writing, retailers large and small are entering the busiest part of the year. In fact, according to the National Retail Federation, nearly 20 percent of all annual retail sales take place between November 1 and December 31. This year, U.S. holiday sales are expected to reach $465.6 billion.

With so much seasonal shopping activity, merchants, even pure-play ecommerce merchants, often find that they need to bring on temporary workers or invest in new capital equipment to manage the rush.

Outsourcing order fulfillment allows retailers to avoid the need to hire and train temps or buy new scales, lifts, or the like. Instead, the retailer simply needs to ensure that the product is in the fulfillment service’s warehouse, and trust the service provider to worry about extra hands and tools. In this way, the merchant has complete seasonal flexibility. When holiday sales are rolling in, the fulfillment service manages the surge. When sales are slower in January, there is no idle equipment — or excess employees to let go.

2. Lower Shipping Costs

Free shipping is an extremely popular marketing tool, with companies like L.L. Bean and Zappos using free shipping or free shipping upgrades to great advantage. But the United States Postal Service, FedEx, and UPS don’t work for free.

Whether merchants are absorbing shipping and freight costs to offer free shipping or passing those costs on to consumers, it makes good sense to do everything possible to keep shipping costs down.

With this in mind, using a fulfillment service company with warehouses spread throughout the country can help to lower the shipping tally. Most package-shipping services offer prices based — at least in part — on how far the shipments travel. Sending a box from L.A. to New York is more costly than shipping one from Philadelphia to New York.

By placing inventory in several regional warehouses, retailers can lower costs, which in turn can become a competitive advantage.

3. Grow New Markets

According to Nate Gilmore, vice president of marketing and business development for fulfillment firm Shipwire, online retailers can also use fulfillment services to expand their businesses to new markets without having to invest in infrastructure or a lot of additional employees.

Although Gilmore, whose company is in the ecommerce order fulfillment business, certainly has something to gain by suggesting that merchants use services like Shipwire, the idea is very sound. In fact, during a recent Practical Ecommerce webinar, Harley Finkelstein, chief platform officer for Shopify, the hosted ecommerce platform, suggested just this tactic.

Imagine that a U.S.-based retailer is enjoying good success, but wants to start selling products to customers in the U.K. With the help of a fulfillment service, the merchant can place inventory in England, add a “.co.uk” version of the site, and begin selling to a completely new market with relative ease.

4. Convert Fixed Costs to Variable Costs

Unless a merchant deals only in software, music, or ebooks, physical inventory will need to be received, housed, and accounted for. Doing so requires physical space. For family startups, a garage might do for a while, but serious ecommerce operations will soon need serious facilities. These facilities — whether purchased or leased — have a fixed cost associated with them. So whether business is slow or roaring the rent stays the same.

Choosing a fulfillment service gives merchants the opportunity to covert some of their fixed costs, like rent, heating and cooling, and similar, into variable costs — expenses that go up and down in relationship to sales — which in turn can do very good things for cash flow.

5. Focus on What You Do Best

Often online entrepreneurs start businesses because they have a passion for the product or a passion for marketing, but, it is relatively less common that someone or some group starts a tee shirt business or an online hardware store because she feels especially gifted at stacking or packing boxes. To be sure, operations managers that can smoothly handle this part of the business are in high demand, but they tend not to be as common in small ecommerce start-ups.

Using a fulfillment service for many retailer business owners is an opportunity to outsource many unfamiliar tasks and focus on what one does best.


 

China Warehousing
ONLINE CHAT
My status My status