Brick
and mortar are dead …
In 2016, demolition of Rolling Acres Mall began. The mall
opened in 1975 on 260 acres on the southwest side of Akron, Ohio. In its
heyday, it featured 140 stores on two levels,1.3 million square feet of retail space,
and 7,500 parking spots.
However, the mall’s demise began long before on-line
shopping became prominent. Safety and security issues scared shoppers away. The
mall was offered at auction in 2009 and received no bids, and the last retail
store closed in 2013. It took a lot of trucks to haul away all that brick and
mortar when they tore it down.
It is now rumored (there is a name on the proposed
blueprints), that a new Amazon fulfillment center will be constructed on that
vacant land. Amazon fulfillment centers are somewhat more than a million square
feet, so it will be just about the same total flooring as the old mall. Naturally,
it will only be one floor, but stand taller.
Brick
and mortar lives!
And what will the center be built from? Brick and mortar
are not dead! But it will take considerably less materials to construct the
fulfillment center than to build a mall with 140 separate stores, including five
large anchors. However, this will be a much more efficient use of brick and
mortar due to the spectacular productivity going on within those walls.
Productivity is the key factor. If someone presented a
business case based on Amazon’s system in 1994 (when Amazon started) it would
have been quickly dismissed, because it would have been thought to be
inefficient and unproductive.
But what about the books? Amazon selling books did not
become profitable until its seventh year. You could say it practiced on books.
Once it achieved a level of operational productivity combined with volume, the
profits began to roll in, and Amazon determined that other products could be
channeled through its system.
How productive is an Amazon fulfillment center? It has been
reported that the Kentucky operation can process 426 orders every second (read
that sentence one more time). In the old mall, if one shopper were present at every
register in every store (adding a few registers at the anchors) at the same
time and assuming it took two-and-a half minutes to process the transaction
(including 30 seconds waiting in line), the fulfillment center would be 400
times more efficient. If the registers were only in use 45 minutes of every
hour, the fulfillment center is 500 times more efficient and, if you factor in
when the mall was closed at night…whoa, sorry, my calculator just exploded.
Amazon achieves this extreme efficiency by using the most
advanced technology available including robotics and 14 miles of conveyor belts
per center. It has also been reported that it squeezes maximum productivity
from its workforce.
Now thousands of on-line retailers are striving to emulate
Amazon, which had a huge head start and holds a dominant competitive and technological
advantage. The U.S. is in a “warehousing boom” (lots of brick and mortar), as
distribution centers spring up across the country. These centers also are
high-tech because efficiency is critical to being able to generate profits and
compete with Amazon and others. So, inside the walls of the fulfillment center
is the pinnacle of efficiency and productivity; but once those cardboard boxes hit
the outside world, peak efficiency stops. This is because the
transportation/logistics sector is trying to figure out how best to deliver
packages that “final mile.” (home delivery).
The transportation players should not be faulted for a slower
response. On-line sales have exploded as the baby boomers’ lust for product selection
and customization melded with Millennials’ need for convenience and immediacy. These
are the same factors that influenced sales methods and distribution historically.
The Sears catalog, first published in 1894, provided people
with a much wider selection of goods than was available at the old General
Store and was an immediate success. Sears serviced the country out of a
3-million square foot warehouse and made so many efficiency improvements along
the way that Henry Ford studied their processes.
Sears opened its first department store in 1925, which
provided the convenience of having many different products available in one location,
with the immediacy of taking the product home with you rather than waiting
weeks for delivery. This concept was so popular that Sears store sales (more
were opened) exceeded catalog sales in just six years, which I find remarkable
when considering the pace of life back then. It’s probably comparable to the way
Amazon is adding fulfillment centers today.
Digitization has revolutionized the news, music, and many
other industries. The Internet took the Sears catalog and digitized it by a
trillion. (It may not be a trillion, but I don’t have time to count every
individual product sold on-line). And then products were able to be delivered
in days, then a day, and now sometimes in hours.
It’s not surprising that logistics is trying to catch up
with all the various problems that exist with home-delivering a growing number
of packages faster and faster. There are reports of traffic jams in
neighborhoods caused by all the delivery vehicles on the streets. (Wouldn’t it
be great if all the packages were on one truck?) And then there are the porch
pirates. (Wouldn’t it be great if there was a central location for neighborhood
pick-up and delivery.) And there are numerous inefficiencies. For example, my
mailperson delivered a football jersey to me one day at 8:30 a.m. and then
returned to deliver my mail around 1 p.m. in the same van. I think I could have
survived those four hours without the jersey – or anything else for that
matter. (But then I’m not a Millennial.)
And just as Amazon uses the latest in technology to make
the warehouse most
efficient, final milers are experimenting with drones,
robots, and self-driving vehicles to deliver packages. Future technologies
might even be developed to solve this specific problem.
Class 8 freight haulers have issues because they must
service both traditional retailers and on-line sellers as the market rapidly
changes. But when all those new warehouses get built, it should make the
logistic system easier to navigate and better than it is now. There is
speculation that the optimal store of the future (free standing) has a
traditional showroom/sales space in the front and a large distribution
center/warehouse in the back.
But the final mile problems will all get solved. We just
need some time to figure out the most efficient and effective ways to do it.
Why am I so sure of this?
Well, history is on our side. At the start of the 20th
century, the major catalog retailers, Sears and Montgomery Wards, had a huge
problem in that 65% of the population didn’t have access to their goods and the
infrastructure to fix this didn’t exist. So, after moving the products hundreds
of miles by rail, they couldn’t get them delivered the…, the…, wait for it…,
the final miles. Yep, the goods market had a final mile problem, but eventually
they got it fixed and sales exploded. If our ancestors could figure it out
using the technology of that day, I’m confident we can too.