Once, back in the 1970s, I built an information system for a
glove retailer. This small company imported work gloves from the Far
East. Primarily, it put the company's own label on the gloves and
sold them to manufacturing companies in the United States. The glove
retailer inventoried small quantities of all products in-house, and
filled small orders directly from that inventory. Large orders were
handled through "drop shipments". The order was accepted from the
customer but instead of filling the order from in-house inventory,
shipping labels and documents were made up and sent with an order to
one of the glove manufacturers out of the country. That glove
manufacturer would fill the order, apply the glove retailer's
shipping labels, include the glove retailer's shipping documents,
and then ship the packaged glove order directly to the end customer.
Drop shipping was a business arrangement where the glove retailer
sold the goods of the glove manuafacturer, but never took possession
or handled those good physically. However, the identity of the
actual company shipping the gloves was never divulged to the
customer, out of fear that the customer would do business directly
with the glove manufacturer, cutting the glove retailer out of
future transactions.
The Internet and e-commerce have extended and expanded the idea
of drop shipping in several ways. Amazon.com has an operation
similar to that of the glove retailer I described above, but in
books instead of gloves. Amazon inventories many books, but also has
cooperative arrangements with other book sellers in which Amazon
lists their books on its system, sells those books, and collects
payment for them, but the books are physically shipped from the
other cooperating booksellers. In the case of used books, Amazon
offers all of the possible source booksellers for a given book, and
shows their respective prices. Amazon does the advertising and
accounting and selling for those cooperating booksellers, and the
company collects a commission for this service. This is drop
shipping--but there is no effort to pretend that the book is shipped
from Amazon's inventory. The identity of the actual bookseller
shipping the book is not hidden.
Ebay inventories nothing. Ebay provides an online selling website
and collects payment, but the customer has no illusion that the
essential element of the transaction, delivering the goods, is
carried out by Ebay rather than by the auction sellers. A major part
of the Ebay system is the provision of a rating and feedback system
on auction sellers. With Ebay, the relationship with the seller is
totally transparent. In fact, Ebay distances itself from the quality
of the transaction between buyer and seller.
Drop shipping has come a long way from my glove retail
system--with much benefit for all involved, I think.