# Real visibility, real results: How AI-assisted inventory coordination is changing the game

_Struggling with real-time inventory visibility? Discover how AI and connected data eliminate stock discrepancies, reduce returns and improve fulfilment decisions._

For many organisations, inventory visibility was supposed to be solved already. Over the past decade, significant investment has gone into commerce platforms, [ERP](https://www.fusion5.com/au/enterprise-resource-planning)systems and supply chain technologies, all designed to provide a clearer, more accurate view of stock across the business.

Yet in practice, the same problem continues to surface. It usually becomes most visible at the moments that matter most, during peak trading periods, promotional events or supply chain disruptions. These are the points where demand is highest, operational pressure is at its peak and customers expect immediate, accurate answers.

Instead, many organisations are still relying on delayed updates, incomplete views of inventory and disconnected information across systems. The result is a situation where teams appear to have visibility but can’t rely on it when it matters.

## Why inventory visibility breaks down

At the core of the problem is fragmentation. Inventory data is rarely held in a single, unified system. It is spread across warehouses, distribution centres, stores and multiple digital platforms, each with its own logic, timing and data structure.

This creates several persistent challenges:

- Stock levels are not synchronised in real time, leading to discrepancies between systems
- Availability differs across channels, particularly between ecommerce and store environments
- Fulfilment options are not aligned to actual inventory position or operational constraints

Individually, these issues are manageable. Collectively, they create a system where no single view of inventory can be relied upon with confidence. As organisations scale across more channels and locations, the complexity increases, and the gaps become harder to manage manually.

## The cost of poor visibility

When inventory visibility is unreliable, the impact is immediate and measurable. At a revenue level, organisations lose sales because products appear unavailable when they are in stock, or because customers abandon purchases due to uncertainty.

At an operational level, teams compensate by carrying excess inventory or relying on manual workarounds to manage fulfilment.

At a margin level, the impact becomes even more pronounced. Returns play a significant role. According to [Australia Post](https://auspost-report.s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/AUS+Post+-Ecommerce+Report+2025.pdf), a $100 bulky goods return costs retailers approximately $26.70 once reverse logistics, restocking and write-downs are accounted for.

When customers receive the wrong product, experience fulfilment delays or encounter inaccurate availability information, the likelihood of returns increases. This creates a compounded effect, where poor visibility drives both lost revenue and rising operational cost.

Discover what "agentic-ready" data infrastructure looks like

## Rising expectations make visibility critical

While these internal challenges persist, customer expectations continue to accelerate.

Almost half (41%) of consumers now [expect to be able to shop seamlessly across multiple platforms](https://www.adyen.com/en_AU/knowledge-hub/au-retail-report-trends), including websites, apps and social channels.

At the same time, [more than 60% consider real-time product availability a critical part of their buying experience](https://kpmg.com/au/en/insights/industry/australian-retail-outlook.html).

This is a fundamental shift. Customers are no longer comparing experiences within a single channel. They are comparing across every interaction and expecting consistency regardless of where they engage. When inventory visibility does not support this, the gap between expectation and delivery becomes highly visible.

## How AI-assisted inventory coordination closes the gap

Traditional approaches treat inventory as a dataset that needs to be updated and reviewed. Agentic approaches treat inventory as a dynamic system that can be continuously monitored and acted upon.

AI agents can operate across connected data sources to:

- Monitor stock levels across multiple locations in real time
- Analyse demand signals and changing buying patterns
- Incorporate fulfilment constraints such as lead times and capacity

Based on this, they can take action by:

- Providing accurate, real-time availability to customers across channels
- Triggering replenishment decisions aligned to demand and inventory thresholds
- Dynamically routing orders to optimise fulfilment outcomes

This shifts inventory management from a reactive process to a coordinated, real-time capability. It also ensures that what customers see is aligned with what the business can deliver in practice.

## From visibility to control

The real shift is not just about seeing inventory more clearly. It is about being able to act on it with confidence. Organisations that connect inventory, fulfilment and customer data create a more responsive operating model.

Instead of reacting to issues after they occur, they can:

- Adjust fulfilment decisions as conditions change
- Prevent stock imbalances before they impact performance
- Align customer expectations with operational reality in real time

This reduces friction across the entire buying journey while improving both service levels and margin performance.

Speak with a Fusion5 specialist about how AI-assisted inventory visibility could reduce fulfilment exceptions and improve margin control across your organisation.

*Why real-time stock visibility remains one of the most persistent challenges in modern commerce*

## Frequently Asked Questions

### Why is inventory visibility still a problem?

Inventory data is often fragmented across systems and not updated in real time, leading to inconsistent availability and poor decision-making.

### What is the impact of poor inventory visibility?

It leads to lost sales, excess stock, inefficient fulfilment and increased returns costs.

### Why do returns matter so much?

[Returns significantly impact profitability](https://auspost-report.s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/AUS+Post+-Ecommerce+Report+2025.pdf), with a $100 return costing around $26.70 once logistics and write-downs are included.

### What are customers expecting now?

Customers expect [seamless experiences across channels](https://www.adyen.com/en_AU/knowledge-hub/au-retail-report-trends) and [accurate, real-time availability information](https://kpmg.com/au/en/insights/industry/australian-retail-outlook.html).

### How does AI improve inventory management?

AI enables continuous monitoring and real-time decision-making across inventory, fulfilment and demand signals.

### What is the shift organisations need to make?

Move from static visibility to dynamic, real-time control across inventory and fulfilment operations.