Reverse logistics is the process of moving goods from their typical final destination (the consumer) back upstream in the supply chain for various purposes such as returns, repairs, recycling, or ...
Logistics professionals navigating their path forward face challenging market conditions, an evolving regulatory environment, a rapidly changing technology landscape, and an increasingly competitive ...
For years, retailers have seen product returns as a headache, or just another cost of doing business. The logistics required for returns needs a different approach and mindset from that of regular ...
When a customer clicks 'return' on a purchase, it triggers a complex process that quietly shapes the backbone of modern retail: reverse logistics. Unlike the familiar forward logistics that move goods ...
Brazil is strengthening its reverse logistics system for pesticide packaging with the rollout of a nationwide itinerant ...
Sylvia Ng is CEO of ReturnBear, a platform for e-commerce reverse logistics, making returns better for brands, customers and the planet. As soon as fall hits, I’m already thinking about the holidays.
If the fashion industry wants to tackle circularity, it must first grapple with its reverse logistics problem. Freight is designed to traverse in one direction, wending its way through a labyrinthine ...
The unpredictable swings of the current economy are adding to what is an unquestionably tumultuous moment for retail. The industry facies uncertainty around what cargo will move in and out of the U.S.
Chain Reaction is Sourcing Journal's discussion series with industry executives to get their take on today's logistics ...
Reverse logistics are an important part of e-commerce, with almost 30% of all online orders returned, depending on the product category. For some types of products, returns will be a small part of ...