Buying from the comfort1st.com
network of sites
The product along with many other
products are taken in a systematic and highly efficient
route to individual homes via a light-duty delivery
truck.
Figure 2 shows the transportation
chain diagram for the e-commerce model. In the e-commerce model, the product begins at a manufacturer and is
delivered to a distributor warehouse, again by heavy-duty truck1. While not shown as a part of the
transportation flow in Figure 2, a customer shops for and buys a product on the e-commerce company
website. After receiving information from the e-commerce company’s data center that the
product has been ordered and needs to be shipped, the distributor warehouse individually packages
and sends the product to the collecting and sorting distribution center via a parcel service,
either by airplane and truck depending on the online
consumer’s preferences for delivery time. The product,
along with other products, is then taken to the individual homes via a light-duty (we assume
a 20,000 lb) delivery truck.
The information above was taken
from the Carnegie Mellon study. To learn more about the
Carnegie Mellon study please click
here.