E-Commerce Operations & Logistics Playbook for Algerian Stores — Inventory, Packaging & Returns (2026)
Operations: The Silent Killer of Algerian E-Commerce Stores
Marketing brings customers to your door. Operations determines whether they stay, whether they pay at delivery, and whether they ever come back.
Most Algerian store owners spend 80 percent of their energy on ads and content and 20 percent on operations. The stores that survive past year two invert that ratio. They know that a rejected COD delivery erases the profit from three accepted ones. They know that running out of stock on a winning product during Ramadan costs more than any ad campaign can recover. They know that a customer who receives a poorly packed, damaged item does not just return it — they tell ten people.
This playbook covers the three operational pillars that determine whether your Algerian e-commerce business is profitable or just busy: inventory management, packaging and unboxing experience, and handling returns and refunds. Each section gives you processes you can implement this week, whether you are running your store from a bedroom in Algiers or a small warehouse in Oran.
And if you want the technical side handled while you focus on operations, DZBuild automates order tracking, COD confirmation, delivery integration, and fake-order filtering — so your operational energy goes into inventory, packaging, and customer experience instead of manual data entry.
Part 1: Inventory Management for Small Algerian Online Stores
Inventory is cash sitting on a shelf. Too much inventory and your capital is frozen. Too little and you lose sales you already paid to generate. The goal is not perfect inventory — it is inventory that never costs you a sale and never ties up more cash than necessary.
The Spreadsheet Phase: Where Every Algerian Store Starts
For your first 50 to 100 orders per month, a spreadsheet is the right tool. Not because it is good — because it is free, and at this volume you can still see everything at a glance. Here is the minimum spreadsheet structure that actually works:
| Column | What Goes In It | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| SKU | A short code you create (e.g., TSH-BLK-M) | Unique identifier for every variant |
| Product Name | Full name including variant (size, color) | Avoids confusion between similar items |
| Supplier | Name and contact | You need to reorder fast |
| Supplier Lead Time (Days) | How many days from ordering to receiving | This number determines your reorder point |
| Current Stock | Live count, updated after every sale and every restock | The only number that matters operationally |
| Reorder Point | The stock level that triggers a new order | Calculated, not guessed (formula below) |
| Reorder Quantity | How many you order each time | Based on lead time demand plus buffer |
| Cost per Unit (DZD) | What you pay the supplier per unit | Feeds your margin calculations |
| Selling Price (DZD) | What you sell it for | Feeds your margin calculations |
| Last Restock Date | Date of most recent replenishment | Tracks supplier reliability |
| Notes | Supplier issues, quality notes, seasonal flags | Institutional memory |
Update this spreadsheet weekly at minimum. Every sale reduces stock; every supplier delivery increases it. If your spreadsheet and your physical shelf do not match, trust the physical shelf and fix the spreadsheet.
The Reorder Point Formula
Do not guess when to reorder. Use this formula:
Reorder Point = (Average Daily Sales x Supplier Lead Time in Days) + Safety Stock
Example: You sell 3 units per day of a product. Your supplier takes 7 days to deliver. You want 2 days of safety stock for unexpected demand spikes.
Reorder Point = (3 x 7) + (3 x 2) = 21 + 6 = 27 units
When your stock hits 27 units, you place the next order. By the time it arrives (7 days later), you will have sold roughly 21 units, leaving you with 6 units of safety stock — enough to cover a 2-day delay or demand spike without going to zero.
When to Move From Spreadsheet to Software
You know it is time to upgrade when any of these happens:
- You have more than 100 SKUs and cannot remember stock levels without opening the sheet
- You have sold out of a product without realizing it, and lost sales as a result
- You spend more than 3 hours per week updating inventory across your spreadsheet, your store, and your suppliers
- You are running promotions or flash sales and cannot track stock depletion in real time
- You have more than one person managing inventory and need a single source of truth
At this stage, inventory management software pays for itself within the first stockout it prevents. Options range from free tools like Google Sheets with automated formulas to dedicated platforms. The key requirement for Algerian stores: the system must work offline or on unstable connections, because internet reliability varies significantly between wilayas.
DZBuild includes built-in inventory tracking that syncs with every order automatically — when a customer buys, stock adjusts in real time. No manual spreadsheet updates. No selling a product you no longer have.
The Weekly Inventory Rhythm
Operations run on rhythm. Here is the inventory cadence that works for small Algerian stores:
| Day | Activity | Time Required |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Count top 20 percent of SKUs (the ones generating 80 percent of revenue) | 30 minutes |
| Wednesday | Review reorder points — place supplier orders for anything at or below threshold | 45 minutes |
| Friday | Full stock reconciliation: spreadsheet vs. physical count, investigate discrepancies | 60 minutes |
| Saturday | Supplier follow-ups: confirm ETAs, flag delays, update lead times | 20 minutes |
Total weekly commitment: roughly 2.5 hours. The alternative — reacting to stockouts as they happen — costs far more in lost sales and rushed supplier orders.
Part 2: Packaging & Unboxing Experience — Your Silent COD Acceptance Booster
In Algerian e-commerce, the delivery moment is everything. A customer who ordered with cash-on-delivery has not paid you yet. They are standing at their door, facing the delivery driver, holding a package they have never seen. In the three seconds between receiving the package and deciding whether to accept it, they are judging your entire business.
Packaging is not a cost center. It is your highest-ROI operational investment.
Why Packaging Directly Controls COD Acceptance
COD rejection happens for many reasons — buyer changed their mind, found a better price, forgot they ordered. But one reason is fully within your control: the package looks untrustworthy. A torn envelope, a crushed box, a package that looks nothing like what the customer expected — these trigger instant rejection at the door.
The data from comparable COD-heavy markets tells the story:
- Structured, branded packaging reduces COD rejection by 15 to 25 percentage points
- A well-designed unboxing experience increases repeat purchase rate by up to 78 percent
- 52 percent of customers share unboxing experiences on social media when the packaging surprises them
- 96 percent of consumers say packaging quality directly affects their trust in the brand
In Algeria, where word-of-mouth drives more purchases than any ad platform, an unboxing worth sharing is free marketing to an audience of friends and family who already trust the person making the recommendation.
The 5-Layer Unboxing Sequence
Great unboxing is not about expensive materials. It is about intentional layering that builds anticipation and communicates care. Here is the sequence:
| Layer | What It Is | Algerian Application |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Outer Protection | The shipping bag or box that takes the beating during transit | Use reinforced poly mailers (25 to 60 DZD each) or double-wall corrugated boxes (80 to 180 DZD depending on size). Water-resistant exterior is non-negotiable — Algerian delivery routes face rain, dust, and rough handling. |
| 2. Brand Reveal | The first thing they see when opening — your logo, colors, or a branded sticker | A custom sticker with your logo costs 15 to 30 DZD. A stamped logo costs near zero after the stamp is made. Tape with your store name printed on it costs 200 to 400 DZD per roll and seals 50 to 80 packages. |
| 3. Protective Inner | The material that keeps the product safe | Bubble wrap (bulk rolls: 400 to 800 DZD), tissue paper (100 to 300 DZD per pack), or shredded paper filling. The rule: the product must survive a 1-meter drop without damage. Test this. |
| 4. The Product Reveal | The moment they see the actual item | Wrap clothing in tissue paper. Place electronics in a fitted insert. Put accessories in a drawstring pouch. The product should feel like a gift, not a warehouse pick. |
| 5. The Thank-You Layer | A personal touch that closes the experience | A handwritten or printed thank-you card (5 to 15 DZD). A discount code for their next purchase. A small free sample if margins allow. One Algerian store includes a single piece of local candy in every order — costs 10 DZD, generates more social media mentions than any ad campaign. |
Packaging Cost vs. Impact Matrix
Not every product needs all five layers. Match your packaging investment to your product value:
| Order Value (DZD) | Recommended Layers | Packaging Budget per Order (DZD) | Expected COD Acceptance Lift |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 2,000 | Layers 1, 2 (sticker), 5 (card) | 50 to 100 | 8 to 12 percentage points |
| 2,000 to 6,000 | Layers 1, 2, 3, 5 | 100 to 200 | 12 to 18 percentage points |
| 6,000 to 15,000 | All 5 layers | 200 to 400 | 15 to 25 percentage points |
| 15,000 plus | All 5 layers, premium materials, gift wrapping | 400 to 800 | 20 to 30 percentage points |
A store doing 200 orders per month at an average order value of 4,000 DZD, spending 150 DZD per package on packaging, invests 30,000 DZD monthly in packaging. If that reduces COD rejection from 30 percent to 15 percent, on 200 orders with an average margin of 1,200 DZD per order, the monthly savings from prevented rejections alone is 36,000 DZD. The packaging pays for itself and then some.
Where to Source Packaging Materials in Algeria
Most packaging materials are available locally:
- Cardboard boxes and mailers: Packaging wholesalers in Alger (Hussein Dey, Oued Smar), Oran (Es Senia), and Constantine. Bulk pricing kicks in at 100 units or more.
- Bubble wrap and protective fill: Available from packaging suppliers and some stationery wholesalers. Buy by the roll, not by the sheet — per-unit cost drops 60 to 70 percent.
- Custom stickers and printed tape: Local print shops in most wilaya capitals can produce these. Order 500-plus for reasonable per-unit pricing (15 to 30 DZD per sticker).
- Tissue paper and thank-you cards: Stationery stores in any city. These are commodity items — compare three suppliers and take the best price.
- Branded boxes (custom printed): Worth considering at 500-plus orders per month. A printing run of 1,000 custom boxes costs roughly 80,000 to 150,000 DZD depending on size and print complexity. At 80 to 150 DZD per box, it is roughly double the cost of plain boxes but delivers the strongest brand impression.
Part 3: Handling Returns & Refunds — The Algerian Operational Playbook
Returns are inevitable. The difference between a store that survives returns and one that drowns in them is having a process that is fast for the customer, protective of your margins, and informative for your buying decisions.
The Real Cost of a Return in Algeria
Most merchants calculate the cost of a return as the refund amount. That misses most of the damage:
| Cost Component | Typical Amount (DZD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Outbound shipping (lost) | 400 to 800 | You paid to send it — this cost is gone |
| Return shipping (if you cover it) | 400 to 800 | Some stores cover this; others make the customer pay |
| Packaging materials (lost) | 50 to 200 | Box, wrap, filler — cannot be reused in most cases |
| Product depreciation | 10 to 50 percent of product value | Opened, tried on, or handled — may only be resellable at a discount |
| Processing labor | 200 to 500 | Time spent receiving, inspecting, restocking, or disposing |
| Payment processing fees | 2 to 4 percent | If original payment was electronic — CIB or Dahabia fees are not refunded by the processor |
| Total per return | 1,050 to 2,300 minimum | Before accounting for product value loss |
A 4,000 DZD product returned costs you at minimum 1,050 DZD in hard costs plus whatever value the product lost. If the product cannot be resold as new, the total loss can exceed the original margin. This is why every percentage point you shave off your return rate drops directly to your bottom line.
Prevention: Reduce Returns Before They Happen
The cheapest return is the one that never occurs. Three operational levers reduce return rates:
1. Product Page Accuracy
Returns happen when the product the customer receives does not match the product they thought they were buying. Fix the root cause:
- Photograph every product from five angles minimum, in natural light
- Include a size reference in photos — a coin, a hand, a common object for scale
- For clothing: provide exact measurements in centimeters, not just S/M/L labels. A "Large" from one supplier fits like a "Medium" from another. Publish the measurements and make sizing disputes the customer's error, not yours.
- For electronics: list exact specifications. If a blender is 400 watts, do not let the description imply 600 watts.
- Include a "What's in the box" photo showing every item the customer will receive
2. Pre-Delivery Confirmation
Between order placement and delivery, a customer's enthusiasm can fade. A well-timed message reactivates it:
- WhatsApp message 24 hours before delivery: "Your order is arriving tomorrow. Here is what to expect and the delivery window."
- Include the order summary in the message so they remember what they bought
- Remind them to have the exact amount ready for COD payment — this subconsciously commits them to accepting
Stores using pre-delivery WhatsApp confirmation see COD rejection rates 10 to 15 percentage points lower than those that stay silent.
3. Order Verification for High-Risk Patterns
Before you ship, scan for orders that have a higher probability of rejection:
- First-time COD customers with order values above 8,000 DZD
- Orders shipping to addresses that have previously rejected COD deliveries
- Multiple COD orders from the same customer in a short window
- Phone numbers that do not answer when called for verification
A 60-second phone call to verify high-risk orders — "Just confirming your order details before we ship" — filters out a significant share of would-be rejectors. The call costs you 60 seconds. The prevented return saves you 1,000 DZD or more.
DZBuild includes built-in order protection that automatically verifies Algerian phone numbers, flags suspicious patterns, and filters fake orders before you ship — no manual checks required.
The Return Flow: Step by Step
When a return does happen, speed is the only thing the customer cares about. Here is the process:
| Step | Action | Time Target | Owner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Receive Request | Customer contacts you via WhatsApp, phone, or your store's return form | Immediate acknowledgment within 2 hours | You or customer service |
| 2. Validate | Check order number, confirm it is within return window, verify the issue | Within 4 hours of request | You |
| 3. Authorize | Approve or deny based on your policy. If approved, send return instructions — where to send, what to include, how to package | Within 8 hours of request | You |
| 4. Receive Return | Package arrives back at your location | Depends on shipping (1 to 7 days) | You or staff |
| 5. Inspect | Open, check product condition, document with photos | Within 24 hours of receipt | You |
| 6. Process Outcome | Refund (full or partial), replace, or reject if policy conditions not met | Within 48 hours of inspection | You |
| 7. Close Loop | Notify customer of resolution, update inventory if restocking, log reason for analysis | Within 24 hours of resolution | You |
The total customer-facing timeline from request to resolution should be under 5 business days. Longer than that and you lose the customer permanently — 59 percent of MENA consumers say a poor return experience directly impacts whether they buy from that store again.
The Refund Policy That Protects You
Your return policy should be visible on your store before the customer buys — it builds trust. Here are the elements of a policy that balances customer confidence with operational protection for the Algerian market:
- Return window: 7 days from delivery for most categories. 3 days for hygiene-sensitive products (cosmetics, undergarments). This is aggressive enough to protect you but fair enough that customers feel safe buying.
- Condition requirement: Product must be unused, with original tags and packaging intact. For clothing, the item must not have been worn beyond trying on. For electronics, seals must be unbroken.
- Who pays return shipping: Customer pays for "changed my mind" returns. You pay for "wrong item sent" or "item arrived damaged" returns. This is fair and reduces frivolous returns.
- Refund method: For COD orders, refund via BaridiMob or CCP transfer within 3 business days of inspection. For CIB/Dahabia payments, refund to the same card within 5 business days.
- Non-returnable items: List them explicitly — opened cosmetics, personalized items, digital products, clearance items marked as final sale.
- Return request process: Customer must contact you (WhatsApp or form) before sending anything back. Unsolicited returns without prior authorization are not accepted.
Publish this policy on your store. Link it in your order confirmation messages. When a customer knows the rules upfront, disputes are faster to resolve.
Analyze Every Return
Every returned product carries a signal. Track the reason for every return in a simple log:
| Return Reason Category | What to Do With the Data |
|---|---|
| Wrong size / fit | Add measurement guides, size reference photos, fit notes to product page |
| Product not as described | Rewrite the description, add more photos, fix misleading claims |
| Arrived damaged | Audit your packaging for that product category — upgrade protection |
| Changed mind | Within acceptable range; if above 5 percent, check if product photos over-promise |
| Delivery too late | Review shipping partner performance, switch if needed |
| Wrong item sent | Audit your picking and packing process — this is fully preventable |
| Defective product | Inspect remaining stock from same batch, contact supplier |
One Algerian store reduced its return rate from 22 percent to 9 percent in three months simply by logging return reasons and fixing the top three causes: inaccurate sizing information, insufficient product photos, and a delivery partner with consistent delays. No ads were changed. No prices were lowered. Operations alone cut the return rate in half.
DZBuild gives you an order management dashboard where every return, rejection, and refund is logged and searchable — so you can spot patterns and fix root causes without building your own tracking system.
How DZBuild Handles the Operational Heavy Lifting
Operations are detail-heavy. The more of the repetitive work you can automate, the more time you have for the work that grows your business. Here is what DZBuild automates out of the box:
- Real-time inventory sync — stock adjusts automatically with every sale, so your store never sells a product you do not have
- Order protection — automated Algerian phone number verification and fake-order detection that flags suspicious orders before you ship
- COD management dashboard — track every COD order from placement to delivery confirmation, with automated WhatsApp and SMS confirmations
- Delivery integrations — 80-plus Algerian carriers (Yalidine, EcoTrack, Maystro, Zr Express, and more) with auto-fetched shipping rates and label printing
- Return and refund tracking — every return logged with reason codes, status updates, and resolution tracking
- Analytics with built-in pixels — Meta, TikTok, Google, Snapchat, and Pinterest pixels installed in one click, so you can measure which products and campaigns drive the most sales
- Mobile-optimized storefront — your product pages load fast on every connection, because 85 percent of Algerian shoppers are on a phone
Every feature is available during the free trial. Set up your inventory, configure your delivery settings, and test the order management flow before committing to a plan.
The Operations-First Store
Marketing gets the glory. Operations keeps the business alive.
The Algerian e-commerce stores that will still be here in 2028 are not necessarily the ones with the best ads or the biggest social media followings. They are the ones where inventory is accurate, packaging earns trust at the door, returns are handled fast, and every operational failure is treated as data to improve the system.
You can build this operations foundation in a month:
- Week 1: Set up your inventory spreadsheet or software. Run a full physical count. Calculate reorder points for your top 20 SKUs.
- Week 2: Redesign your packaging sequence. Order branded stickers, thank-you cards, and any missing protective materials. Pack and photograph your new unboxing experience.
- Week 3: Write and publish your return policy. Set up your return request process. Create your return reason tracking log.
- Week 4: Implement pre-delivery WhatsApp confirmations. Start verifying high-risk COD orders before shipping. Review your first month of return data.
A month from now, you either have an operational foundation that compounds — or you are another month deeper into operational chaos that silently erodes your margins. The only variable is whether you start.
Launch your store on DZBuild's free 3-day trial — and spend the trial setting up the operational systems that make your business durable.
