Adaptive Business Models at the Intersection of Online and Offline Logistics

Sulima Ievgenii Pavlovich

Citation: Sulima Ievgenii Pavlovich, "Adaptive Business Models at the Intersection of Online and Offline Logistics", Universal Library of Business and Economics, Volume 02, Issue 03.

Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

This paper looks at the present difficulties encountered by modern omnichannel companies, arising from the need to unify online and offline logistics under ever-tightening customer needs for quickness, clarity, and eco-friendliness of delivery. This research aims to create a method for classifying and assessing flexible business models that can guarantee nimble stock distribution, adaptable “ship-from-store” and “click-&-collect” situations, and the addition of ESG measures in the optimization of supply chains. A shift in consumer preferences drives the relevance of this work: over 90% of shoppers in various countries actively use the Internet to research products before visiting a store, and nearly half are willing to pay a premium for sustainable delivery solutions—factors that compel retailers to adopt flexible and transparent logistical schemes. The novelty of the article lies in the comprehensive integration of content analysis of industry reports and academic studies, the qualitative classification of four archetypes of adaptive business models, and the quantitative modeling of logistics flow scenarios accounting for both traditional KPIs and ESG indicators. The study identifies the key components of a successful adaptive logistics network: an omnichannel inventory pool, micro-fulfillment centers and shared urban hubs, intelligent routing with AI-driven routing engines and edge analytics, robotic picking, and a digital twin of the supply chain. It is demonstrated that application of the proposed archetypes can reduce last-mile costs by more than 10%, increase on-time delivery rates by 15%, and decrease the carbon footprint of operations by 8–12%. The step-by-step implementation framework—diagnosing existing supply chains, piloting micro-warehouse projects, integrating OMS/WMS/CRM systems, and 3PL partnerships—delivers evidence on the high scalability and economic viability of adaptive models under diverse market conditions. This article shall gain value by supply chain managers, retail operations directors, logistics consultants, and researchers in omnichannel business models.


Keywords: Adaptive Business Models, Omnichannel Logistics, Micro-Fulfillment Centers, Digital Twin, ESG Metrics, Last-Mile Delivery, ROPO, Ship-from-Store, Click-&-Collect, AI-Routing, Supply Chain Optimization.

Download doi https://doi.org/10.70315/uloap.ulbec.2025.0203004