Abstract

Factory gate pricing (FGP) is a relatively new phenomenon in retail distribution. Under FGP, products are no longer delivered at the retailer distribution center, but collected by the retailer at the factory gates of the suppliers. Owing to both the asymmetry in the distribution networks (the supplier sites greatly outnumber the retailer distribution centers) and the better inventory and transport coordination mechanisms, this is likely to result in high cost savings. A mathematical model was used to analyze the benefits of FGP. The main contribution of this paper is its practical approach to transport consolidation in this recently emerging supply chain concept in retail distribution. Extensive numerical results for a large real-life case study of the Dutch retail distribution are presented to show the effect of the orchestration shift from supplier to retailer, the improved coordination mechanisms, and sector-wide cooperation.

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