The simple truth is that when you are processing thousands of cases an hour and shipping dozens of trailers per day, there just isn’t a lot of time for VAS, especially that which doesn’t provide real benefit.
In any event, the DC should have a process to approve a customer for VAS, because in the end it’s a business decision. You can tell a customer that the DC can do just about anything they want but it’s not free. The customer needs to gauge how important it is to its business. Sometimes retailers are surprised that their requests don’t add any value.
As an example, one VP of Operations, described a situation where an existing customer ordered standard 12 packs last year, however this year all their orders were in 6 packs. The Ops VP went back to the customer explaining that when you’re handling 80,000 cases verses 40,000 there is a big difference in handling and processing cost. That particular customer understood the logistics cost impact for the DC, as well as for them, and immediately changed their PO back to 12 packs.
Still, for some DCs the consequences of VAS have been more frequent shipments and in smaller quantities, forcing many of them into piece-pick operations where they had previously been a full case-based pick. Or, at the very least, having to open full cases to apply tickets and other paperwork and then manually applying a special shipping label.
If it is determined that the cost absorption for a specified VAS is too great, the DC can try to work with the customer to obtain waivers, or in some extreme situations refuse to comply.
On the other hand, a major component of an efficient supply chain is getting everything done on the first touch. Therefore, it can be logically argued that in many cases moving VAS upstream to the manufacturing level is moving it in the right direction. That’s crucial, for example, in a DC where 60% or more of products purchased are in less-than-case quantities, meaning those SKUs must be picked and packed manually before they leave the DC.
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