- 1. The driver only shows up after you say you’re ready
- 2. Your staff needs the tools, or the program eats your day
- 3. Route the order to the location that has the SKU
- 4. When something’s damaged or missing, don’t ship the partial order silently
- 5. Make sure your store gets credit for the sale
- The shape of a same-day program that actually works in the store
Same-Day Delivery, From the Store Manager’s Side of the Counter
Most articles about same-day delivery are written for the executive who decided to buy it. This one is for the store manager who has to make it work.
It’s 11:47am on a Saturday. Your phone buzzes — new same-day order. The stockroom is asking about a transfer, three BOPIS customers are at the counter, and your substitute associate started yesterday. The driver will be at your back door in 55 minutes.
We’ve watched a lot of store managers run same-day well and a lot run it badly. The difference isn’t talent. It’s a handful of things about how the program is set up that most people figure out the hard way. Here’s the shortcut.
1. The driver only shows up after you say you’re ready
This is the part nobody explains in the launch meeting. Same-day orders look like BOPIS orders in your POS — same banner, same queue. The difference is the dispatch model.
You don’t book the driver. The system does. You mark the order ready in your fulfillment app, and the platform pings the closest available driver. The driver shows up a few minutes later, picks up, and goes. You never see a phone number, never make a call, never pre-schedule anything.
That has one important consequence: the clock you see on the order is your prep deadline, not the driver’s arrival time. If the order needs to be at the customer’s door by 4pm and the customer is 30 minutes away, the platform expects you ready by about 3:00 — and a driver will then arrive within a few minutes of you marking ready. You almost always have more time than the order banner makes it feel like.
2. Your staff needs the tools, or the program eats your day
This is the difference between same-day that helps your store and same-day that hurts it.
Stores running this well have:
- Real notifications. The fulfillment app pings the staff member who’s on it, not just “the store” in the abstract. A new order at 1:14pm and the right person knows within seconds.
- A picking flow that takes minutes. Find the SKU, scan or confirm, bag it, label it, mark ready. Not “log into three tabs and reconcile.”
- A clean driver handoff. The driver scans, you confirm the order number on the package, photo’s taken, done. Not “let me find a manager.”
- A separate path from BOPIS. Same-day orders are not BOPIS orders. The clock is tighter, the handoff is to a driver not a customer, the packaging is more like an outbound parcel than a “here’s your bag.” Treating them as the same workflow is what burns store teams out.
If your fulfillment app doesn’t give you those things, push back on corporate. Same-day with bad store tooling is a program that fails at the store level for reasons nobody at HQ understands.
3. Route the order to the location that has the SKU
Multi-store retailers running same-day well route the order to the store that has the inventory — not the store closest as the crow flies. A customer in Brooklyn ordering a specific running shoe in size 10.5 doesn’t care that the Manhattan store is geographically closer. They care that the Queens store has the size.
This requires real-time inventory awareness across your locations. If your retailer doesn’t have that hooked up, the same-day program will route to stores that don’t have stock and you’ll be running unnecessary inter-store transfers all day. Push for the inventory bridge before the program goes live.
4. When something’s damaged or missing, don’t ship the partial order silently
You’ll hit an order where one of the items in the cart is damaged, missing from the floor, or otherwise unfulfillable. The default move in a busy moment is to ship the rest and not mention it. Customer expected four candles, got three, leaves a 1-star review. Nobody wins.
The right move depends on your tooling, but it’s one of:
- Substitute and notify. If the platform supports it (Getcho does on Shopify orders via the order-edit API), swap the missing item and notify the customer. They approve or refund the line.
- Partial fulfill. Refund the missing line, ship the rest, customer knows what happened.
- Cancel and refund the whole order. Reserve this for cases where the missing item is the point of the order (the cake for a birthday, the gift card the rest of the cart is built around).
The wrong move is silent partial fulfillment. The customer notices. Your district director notices. Everyone loses.
5. Make sure your store gets credit for the sale
The most overlooked thing about same-day in chain retail.
When you fulfill a same-day order, does the sale ring to your store? The answer is: it depends on how corporate set the program up. Three patterns:
- Credit to the fulfilling store. The right answer. If your team pulled and handed off, the sale rings to your store.
- Credit to the customer’s nearest store. Wrong. Creates a bad incentive — the geographically-closest store gets the sale even if your store did the work.
- Credit to e-commerce as a whole. Worst. No store has any incentive to fulfill quickly.
If you don’t know which model your retailer uses, ask your district director in writing before the next launch meeting. “When my team fulfills a same-day order, does the sales credit ring to my store?” Same-day programs that don’t credit fulfilling stores get sandbagged at the store level and nobody at HQ can figure out why.
Same applies to staff hours. If your associates spend 15 minutes per order pulling, packing, and handing off, those minutes need to count somewhere — either as a separate fulfillment hour pool or part of your labor budget. If they’re nowhere, your wage budget is silently bleeding into a corporate program.
The shape of a same-day program that actually works in the store
The retailers we work with that have the smoothest store-level experience share a pattern:
- They route by inventory, not just geography
- Their staff has a tight notification → pick → handoff workflow
- They surface same-day on their storefront as a real channel, not a hidden checkout option
- Their stores get sales credit and hours credit for what they fulfill
- Their corporate team trusts the platform to handle the courier piece without store involvement
If your retailer has those five things, your job is easy. If they don’t, the parts above are the conversations to start having.
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