Apple takes top spot in online order fulfillment in Q4 with average ship time of 2.5 days
In its first ever quarterly study, customer service analytics firm StellaService ranked Apple as the fastest and most most efficient online retailer in terms of shipments for the fourth quarter of 2014, taking an average of 2.5 days to send out orders.
Detailed in a StellaService's Benchmark report published Thursday, Online Apple Store customers saw their packages arrive an average of 1.5 days faster than the four-day delivery time average aggregated from the Web's top 25 retailers. The number is down slightly from a one-month period sampled in June 2014, when Apple ranked No. 1 for the first time with a 2.3-day order fulfillment average.
Apple-centric data provided to AppleInsider covering the period between February 2014 and January 2015 shows 85 percent of Apple orders were fulfilled on the day they were placed, compared to 41 percent for the rest of the Top 40. All Apple orders tracked by StellaService were shipped within one business day.
Aside from speed, the Shipping Benchmark factors in package fit, package quality, whether companies offered and met an estimated delivery date and other metrics. For example, Apple has provided shipping estimates on all orders in placed in the last 12 months and boasts a 96 percent success rate for on-time deliveries. The Top 40 provided estimates on 95 percent of orders, but only managed to meet those estimates 74 percent of the time.
Looking beyond shipping, Apple took an average of five days to issue refunds to customers, nearly two times faster than a 9.7-day average put in by the study's Top 40 retailers. StellaService attributes the quick turnaround to Apple's reliance on FedEx 2Day shipping for returns, as well as internal efficiency that allows it to process refunds within two days of receiving the item versus 4.7 days for the Top 40.
Customer care metrics proved Apple representatives have above average product knowledge, dubbed Product IQ, and achieved a perfect score in 7 of the last 12 months. The company's chat-based customer service score has improved to 92 percent in the last 6 months, up from 87 percent over the first half of 2014.
Taking shipping, returns and phone, email and chat support into consideration, Apple landed in third place overall behind online clothiers L.L.Bean and J.Crew.
StellaService analysts perform daily evaluations of 124 online retailers to generate Benchmark data. The report issued today includes results from the retail fiscal fourth quarter of 2014 ending in January.
Detailed in a StellaService's Benchmark report published Thursday, Online Apple Store customers saw their packages arrive an average of 1.5 days faster than the four-day delivery time average aggregated from the Web's top 25 retailers. The number is down slightly from a one-month period sampled in June 2014, when Apple ranked No. 1 for the first time with a 2.3-day order fulfillment average.
Apple-centric data provided to AppleInsider covering the period between February 2014 and January 2015 shows 85 percent of Apple orders were fulfilled on the day they were placed, compared to 41 percent for the rest of the Top 40. All Apple orders tracked by StellaService were shipped within one business day.
Aside from speed, the Shipping Benchmark factors in package fit, package quality, whether companies offered and met an estimated delivery date and other metrics. For example, Apple has provided shipping estimates on all orders in placed in the last 12 months and boasts a 96 percent success rate for on-time deliveries. The Top 40 provided estimates on 95 percent of orders, but only managed to meet those estimates 74 percent of the time.
Looking beyond shipping, Apple took an average of five days to issue refunds to customers, nearly two times faster than a 9.7-day average put in by the study's Top 40 retailers. StellaService attributes the quick turnaround to Apple's reliance on FedEx 2Day shipping for returns, as well as internal efficiency that allows it to process refunds within two days of receiving the item versus 4.7 days for the Top 40.
Customer care metrics proved Apple representatives have above average product knowledge, dubbed Product IQ, and achieved a perfect score in 7 of the last 12 months. The company's chat-based customer service score has improved to 92 percent in the last 6 months, up from 87 percent over the first half of 2014.
Taking shipping, returns and phone, email and chat support into consideration, Apple landed in third place overall behind online clothiers L.L.Bean and J.Crew.
StellaService analysts perform daily evaluations of 124 online retailers to generate Benchmark data. The report issued today includes results from the retail fiscal fourth quarter of 2014 ending in January.
Comments
Tim's forté.
Tim's probably upset they came in number 3 overall. " src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" />
2.5 days? Where's Amazon on the list and Prime? Apple seems to always ship my stuff from China, which takes 5+ days. It often takes so long, it sits over a weekend, meaning at least 7. I bet their numbers are skewed by things like accessories.
2.5 days? Where's Amazon on the list and Prime? Apple seems to always ship my stuff from China, which takes 5+ days. It often takes so long, it sits over a weekend, meaning at least 7. I bet their numbers are skewed by things like accessories.
The non-Prime side of Amazon probably knocks it off the list.
On one the Returns list they broke the top 25. I didn't see them on the Shipping list. I understand why they can't count Prime, and I remember how my next day non-Prime shipments started slipping into nearly a week wait after Prime really picked up steam. I've also waited longer than a week before an item shipped when it came via Amazon but filled by someone else. I would count those as Amazon, too.
This in the quarter where people ordered new iPhones and many waited weeks for them?
3rd rank would be a great result but what about this statement:
"All Apple orders tracked by StellaService were shipped within one business day."
So surely iPhones were not included in the orders they tracked.
You're having Tim over for tea?
Wow, hope you get on well with him.
The article and accompanying graphic confuse me. Why does the article state that Apple is #1 on shipping but the graphic shows the overall rating which places Apple at 3rd?