The Last Mile Isn't a Delivery Problem. It's a Data Problem.
The final leg of the supply chain generates the richest behavioural data in logistics — and almost nobody is using it strategically. That gap is becoming a competitive divide.
Ask any logistics executive where their biggest cost pressure lives, and the answer is almost always the same: the last mile. The final leg of delivery — typically defined as the journey from a local distribution hub to the end consumer's door — accounts for somewhere between 40 and 53 percent of total supply chain cost. It is slow, unpredictable, difficult to optimise at scale, and stubbornly resistant to the efficiency gains that have transformed earlier stages of the chain. The industry has responded with investment in electric vehicles, drone pilots, locker networks, and crowd-sourced delivery models. These are all legitimate responses to a real operational challenge. But they are answers to the wrong question.
Why the framing is wrong
The last mile is not primarily a delivery problem. It is a data problem — specifically, a problem of underutilised data. Every last-mile interaction generates a signal: precise GPS coordinates, delivery timestamps, driver dwell time, failed delivery reasons, consumer availability windows, door access patterns, return initiation rates, and signature capture metadata. In aggregate, across thousands of daily deliveries in a single urban area, this data constitutes something remarkable: a granular, continuously updated map of where people are, when they are available, what they order, how reliably they receive it, and how their behaviour changes with the seasons, weather, and economic conditions.
Almost none of this is being used strategically. The data is collected — it has to be, for operational tracking — but it is stored in dispatch systems, analysed retrospectively for exceptions, and reported upward as operational metrics. The questions it could answer are never asked, because the organisations collecting it have not yet recognised what they have.
This is not primarily a technology gap. The tools to extract strategic value from this data exist and are mature. It is a framing gap: last-mile operations are managed as a cost centre, which means the data they produce is treated as operational exhaust rather than strategic asset. That framing is increasingly expensive to maintain.
"Last-mile operations are managed as a cost centre. That means the data they generate is treated as operational exhaust rather than strategic asset. That framing is increasingly expensive to maintain."
What the data actually contains
A single last-mile delivery event generates multiple distinct data streams, each with strategic value that extends well beyond its operational purpose. Understanding what these streams contain — and what becomes possible when they are combined — is the prerequisite for treating last-mile data as an asset.
Each of these streams is valuable in isolation. Combined, across time, at sufficient scale, they constitute something that has no precedent in logistics: a continuously self-updating model of consumer behaviour and urban demand patterns, updated with every delivery event. The organisations that recognise this are not managing last-mile data as operational exhaust. They are managing it as infrastructure.
Three places where the data advantage is already compounding
The gap between organisations treating last-mile data as an asset and those treating it as exhaust is not theoretical. It is showing up in measurable operational and commercial advantages across three specific domains.
Static routing models assume consumer availability based on historical averages. Organisations mining their own delivery failure data can build probabilistic availability models at the address level — sequencing stops to maximise first-attempt success rates in real time. First-attempt delivery rates above 96% are now achievable for operators with sufficient historical data depth. The industry average remains below 85%.
Last-mile delivery density data — which products are being delivered where, and at what frequency — constitutes a leading indicator of local demand shifts that precedes retail sell-through data by days. Logistics operators sitting on this data can, in principle, offer demand intelligence as a service to the retailers and brands they carry, creating revenue streams that have nothing to do with the cost of delivery.
The placement of micro-fulfilment centres, parcel lockers, and spoke hubs is typically driven by population density models and lease availability. Organisations with rich last-mile data can instead site these assets based on actual delivery demand topology — where volumes are growing, where failure rates cluster, where dwell times suggest access constraints. The difference in asset utilisation is significant.
The cost of treating the data as exhaust
The operational cost of last-mile inefficiency is well-documented. What is less often quantified is the opportunity cost of the data that those inefficiencies generate — and leave unexploited.
Failed deliveries are where the data gap is most immediately costly, and most visible. But the more significant long-run cost is the foregone advantage in demand forecasting and network design — where compounding data advantage translates into durable structural edge that becomes progressively harder for competitors to close.
"The most valuable thing Amazon has built in logistics is not its delivery fleet. It is its behavioural dataset — and the last mile is where that dataset is continuously refreshed."
The Amazon problem — and what it means for everyone else
Any honest discussion of last-mile data strategy has to reckon with Amazon. The most valuable thing Amazon has built in logistics over the past decade is not its delivery fleet, its fulfilment centre network, or its Prime membership model — although all three are formidable. It is its behavioural dataset. Every delivery generates a signal. Every signal refines the model. The model improves every routing decision, every inventory placement, every Prime Now availability window. The flywheel has been running for years, and the gap it has opened is not primarily a capital gap — it is a data gap.
For logistics operators and retailers competing with Amazon's fulfilment capabilities, this has an important implication. The path to competitive parity does not run through matching Amazon's capital investment. It runs through treating the data generated by existing operations with the same strategic seriousness that Amazon does. The data is already being collected. The infrastructure to store it is already in place. What is missing, in most cases, is the organisational will to ask different questions of it.
That will is a cultural and leadership question as much as a technical one. Last-mile operations teams are incentivised on cost per delivery and on-time rates. Data strategy is rarely within their remit, and rarely in their line of sight. Closing the data advantage gap requires someone to own the question of what the last-mile data is worth — and to have the authority to do something about the answer.
Where to start — and what to stop doing
For organisations ready to treat last-mile data as a strategic asset rather than operational exhaust, the starting point is not a new platform investment. It is an audit of what is already being collected, where it lives, and what questions it is currently not being asked to answer. In most cases, the data required to begin building availability models, delivery density maps, and failure pattern analyses already exists in dispatch and TMS systems. It is simply not being used for those purposes.
What to stop doing is equally important. Reporting failed deliveries as an operational metric without investigating the addressable portion of that failure. Treating route optimisation as a solved problem because a routing engine is in place. Making hub and locker siting decisions without reference to delivery density data. Each of these habits represents a choice to leave value on the table — and a choice that competitors with stronger data discipline are increasingly exploiting.
The questions worth asking before your next last-mile investment
The last mile will remain expensive. But the organisations that close the gap between what it costs and what it is worth will be those that stopped treating it purely as a delivery problem — and started treating the data it generates as the asset it already is.