Thanks to new technologies,
traditional businesses have been revolutionised, for example the hotel industry
and temporary housing industry with AirBnB. The same concept is now being
applied to warehousing by a Seattle based start-up named Flexe. It is a cloud
based platform that connects organizations that need warehousing space to
organizations with extra space.
Technology enablers
Multi-user warehouse have been
owned by 3PL for long, but as for today, there is no tailor-made, highly
flexible warehousing service offer for a company willing to pay. By focusing on
profitable service offer (transshipment, picking, order preparation) rather
than on stock holding would probably enable new offers to emerge.
With fast e-commerce development
to be expected, related logistic needs will become more common, such as
same-day deliveries and highly flexible charge. More and more retailers want to
go online, but don’t always have the necessary operational knowledge. The new
wave of multi-user warehouses will have to address these needs and likely focus
on high-turnover items. Economies of scale and good optimisation can allow to
locate new high-turnover, multi-user warehouses near the cities, to massify
last-mile deliveries and reduce their distance.
This new warehousing offer could
attract small e-commerce retailers who don’t have their own facility, companies
that want extra-fast delivery for a special offer or expect a high demand for
promotional and featured items.
Flexe : the AirBnB of warehousing
In less than five years, Flexe
has created a marketplace of spare storage space in 550 warehouses, quickly
establishing better geographic coverage than the vast delivery network that
Amazon.com Inc. spent decades and billions building. Flexe did it without
spending a nickel on facilities and already has 25 million square feet of
storage, about 25 percent of Amazon’s capacity, and expects to add 10 million
square feet this year. Merchants book storage space via a simple-to-navigate
website; Flexe is essentially the AirBnB
of warehousing.
Flexe approach
Shoppers' accelerating shift
online is straining warehouse space around the U.S., pushing the vacancy rate
to the lowest level in 17 years. Flexe is tapping into an inventory of unused
space that doesn't show up in the vacancy measure. That space is tied up in
long-term contracts, but much of it goes unused for months at a time. Beverage
companies and home-improvement stores build warehouses with capacity for the summer
months when their business peaks, leaving them with extra space the rest of the
year. Warehouses operated by Halloween costume wholesalers empty out just as
the holiday shopping season hits and most retailers need more space. Flexe is
arbitraging the mismatch between supply and demand, taking a commission for
each transaction.
Today, the company has 200
partners. Iron Mountain, which provides document storage for financial, legal,
healthcare and government clients, signed on with Flexe two years ago to sell
extra space in its 1,000 facilities in 90 markets.
Final thoughts
New players like Flexi have
succeeded in bringing collaborative economy to warehousing. Flexe has redefined
the warehousing industry by finding spare warehouse space for e-commerce merchants,
and is now set to offer overnight delivery all over the U.S.
Going forward, new entrants like Flexe
will be the market maker in warehousing space. These players will certify new
warehouse providers that want to list their services, provide for standard
business terms, prescribe an operational system that provides warehouse
management capabilities, bill the customers on behalf of the warehouse
operators, collect the fees (inclusive of a markup to pay for their services),
and monitor transactions to ensure customers are getting quality service.
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