In an ideal world, companies would be able to offer flawless order accuracy. Every customer would get the exact products they ordered, in the correct quantities and conditions, all in a timely fashion. Customer satisfaction levels would skyrocket, and brands wouldn’t have to worry about the hidden costs that come along with inaccurate orders and fulfillment mistakes.
Unfortunately, in the real world, inaccurate orders are almost inevitable for the vast majority of companies. This guide explores how costly they can be, as well as how to improve order accuracy through automation.
It’s no secret that fulfillment errors come with unnecessary costs. When businesses get orders wrong, they have to spend more time, effort, and money fixing their mistakes, like covering return shipping costs, for example.
But, it’s not just transportation costs and wasted energy, the true cost of inaccurate orders is far greater than you may first expect.
What Counts as an "Inaccurate Order"?
Before we take a closer look at the hidden costs of inaccurate inventory management, it’s important to understand what actually qualifies as an inaccurate order.
Order accuracy is when customers get the exact products they ordered, in the right amounts, at the right times. Naturally, this is what every company should strive for. High-order accuracy invariably fosters stronger customer loyalty and satisfaction.
An inaccurate order, meanwhile, is the result of one or more errors, which might include:
The Direct Costs of Inaccurate Orders
There are both direct and indirect consequences of inaccurate orders. The direct costs are the easiest to see and are sometimes the only ones that many businesses think of and focus on.
Examples of direct costs include:
In the majority of cases, if an order is wrong, the customer will send it back. Most businesses will have to cover the return shipping costs, then pay additional costs to send out the right item, should the customer desire a replacement. If they opt instead for a refund, the provider then has to consider the storage costs once the excess inventory re-enters their warehouse.
Ideally, businesses want to see their warehouse and supply chain staff sending orders out and generating revenue, not having to waste time and energy handling returns and fixing mistakes. Unfortunately, inventory discrepancies and order errors often lead to extra labor costs, as workers have to spend time processing the return, picking replacement products, and so on.
Along with the obvious costs, there are also an array of hidden fees associated with poor inventory management. Some notable hidden costs include:
Every inaccurate order introduces rework. Staff have to spend time and energy searching for and finding replacement orders, reprinting shipping labels, dealing with billing discrepancies, and communicating with customers, etc.
That same time and energy could have been used to fulfill other orders. Instead, those orders can end up getting delayed as backlogs and bottlenecks build up.
Inaccurate orders often occur because businesses continue to rely on manual processes when more efficient, automated alternatives are available. Inaccuracies can happen when staff re-key order data in different systems or update spreadsheets by hand, for example.
In persisting with these processes, warehouses end up with “error magnets,” workflows that are almost guaranteed to generate recurring mistakes until they’re addressed or automated.
Inaccurate orders and inventory issues are often closely related. If an order is sent out containing the wrong items, for example, inventory records may not be updated correctly.
That, in turn, can lead to various negative knock-on effects, like replenishment triggers failing and stock calculations becoming inaccurate and unreliable. This can eventually cause more serious issues, such as avoidable stockouts or overstocks.
It’s not just within the warehouse itself that inaccurate orders cause problems. Their negative effects are also felt by the customer who placed the order to begin with.
When customers place an order, they expect to get what they paid for, within a reasonable timeframe. If that doesn’t happen, customer trust will almost surely erode. Even a single bad experience can turn customers off a brand for a long time, if not forever.
They may also dissuade friends and contacts from dealing with the brand in the future, or leave negative feedback online, all of which is much more damaging and difficult to deal with than simply getting the order right to begin with.
Often, when customers don’t get their orders in full or on time, their first response is to contact the company’s support team. The more errors occur, the greater the support staff’s workload becomes.
This can lead to delays and disruptions as other customers attempt to get in touch with inquiries of their own. That often results in missed sales opportunities and lost revenue if and when prospective buyers grow tired of waiting.
Fixing inaccurate orders manually is notoriously difficult because even a minor mistake can soon spiral and affect various other systems.
If an order is packed and shipped with the wrong items, for example, it may take several days for warehouse staff to find out about the error when the customer reports it. In the meantime, inventory management systems and other software solutions, like WMS or CRM, may have been incorrectly updated with the wrong data, and various downstream processes may also have been triggered.
To find and fix all those inconsistencies manually demands a huge amount of time and effort, and it would be very easy to miss something along the way. What’s more, manual data entry and updates also introduce the risk of additional errors being made, making the problem even worse.
Automation is arguably the single most effective way to minimize the risk of order inaccuracies. Here are just some of its biggest benefits:
Many businesses operate with disconnected systems, like spreadsheets, shipping tools, and warehouse management solutions, which all have to be updated independently. That can easily lead to inconsistencies and information blind spots.
With an automated and centralized system, all relevant data is consolidated in a single, unified environment, providing stronger visibility and the ability to respond to and resolve any discrepancies or anomalies almost immediately.
It’s much easier and cheaper to fix inaccurate orders before they leave your warehouse or distribution center than after they’re out the door and on their way to the customer.
That’s where automated validation comes in. This involves automated checks at key stages of the order lifecycle to verify that the correct items have been collected, customer information is accurate and complete, order payments have been processed properly, etc.
The best automated systems are always up-to-date, with round-the-clock monitoring and real-time adjustments to inventory databases and other systems as orders are received, processed, and shipped. This helps minimize risks of overselling, stockouts, or unnecessary replenishment triggers, while also easing friction between support, sales, and warehousing teams.
Automation improves order accuracy, but only when the operation has clear coordination and real-time visibility.
In many warehouses, fulfillment systems operate in silos. The WMS tracks inventory, shipping software handles labels, and equipment executes tasks independently. When information doesn’t flow cleanly between them, small data mismatches can quickly become incorrect picks, duplicate shipments, or delayed orders.
This is where BoxLogix’s proprietary Logix warehouse control system (WCS) plays a critical role. Rather than replacing your existing systems, Logix connects them and manages how orders move through the facility. It acts as an operational layer between software and material handling equipment, ensuring each order follows the correct path and that issues are caught before they leave the building.
Logix supports order accuracy by providing:
By coordinating systems and automation in real time, Logix helps prevent many of the fulfillment errors that lead to returns, rework, and customer dissatisfaction. Instead of reacting to mistakes after shipment, operations can resolve issues inside the warehouse, where corrections are faster and far less costly.
Accurate, automated order processing doesn’t just save firms money. It also delivers numerous other benefits, including:
When large parts of your order fulfillment workflows are automated, it’s much faster to respond to orders as they come in. Automated pickers and material handling solutions can find the required items, transport them across the warehouse, print off shipping labels, and get products and packages out the door far faster than if staff had to do all of that work themselves, all while maintaining high accuracy.
With automation, customers will almost always get their orders more quickly and are far less likely to encounter any issues in terms of quantities, quality, or product selection. This should improve their satisfaction levels, making them more trusting of the brand in question and more likely to buy from it in the future and recommend it to those they know, which can help with customer acquisition.
When deciding whether to automate, too many businesses think automation has to be “all or nothing.” But, thankfully, that’s not the reality.
It’s perfectly possible to employ a “hybrid” system, involving a mixture of manual and automated workflows, while still enjoying many of the benefits that automation brings, like reduced error rate and more efficient operations. Many brands make the transition from manual to automated processes in a gradual, incremental process, rather than a total, instant shift.
As this guide has shown, the costs of inaccurate orders involve so much more than printing off an extra shipping label or paying some extra postage fees.
Wrong orders can impact customer loyalty, satisfaction, and lifetime value, while also causing avoidable excess labor costs, wasted time, and increased burden on your teams. For these reasons, and others, all brands should take order accuracy seriously and seek out ways to improve it.
The best way to boost your order accuracy rate and avoid the needless costs that come with wrong orders is through automation. That’s where BoxLogix comes in. A specialist provider of turn-key automated handling solutions, we make warehouses and distribution centers worldwide more efficient and less error-prone.
Want to learn where order errors originate in your operation and whether automation could realistically reduce them? Schedule a fulfillment workflow review with our team today to discover how we can help.
Order fulfillment errors typically stem from manual processes, disconnected systems, and poor visibility across operations. When staff must re-enter data, rely on spreadsheets, or work between multiple platforms that don’t update in real time, small mismatches can lead to wrong picks, duplicate shipments, or delayed orders. These issues are rarely caused by individual workers and more often by workflow gaps.
Warehouses can reduce picking errors by standardizing workflows, improving visibility, and adding verification steps throughout fulfillment. Technologies such as barcode scanning, real-time inventory tracking, and guided picking help ensure the correct items are selected before shipment. Automation and system-driven validation are especially effective because they prevent mistakes rather than correcting them after they occur.
Inaccurate orders affect margins through more than just return shipping costs. Businesses must also account for replacement shipments, additional labor, administrative handling, and lost productivity from rework. Over time, customer dissatisfaction and negative reviews can reduce repeat purchases, making order errors both an operational expense and a revenue problem.
Warehouse automation improves order accuracy by removing many of the manual steps where errors typically occur. Automated systems verify quantities, route orders correctly, and keep inventory records synchronized in real time. By catching discrepancies before shipment, operations can correct issues inside the warehouse instead of dealing with costly returns and customer complaints.
A warehouse should consider automation when order volume, labor demands, or error rates begin to strain daily operations. Frequent rework, delayed shipments, and rising returns are often signs that manual processes can no longer keep pace with demand. Automation allows facilities to scale reliably while maintaining consistent service levels and order accuracy.