BOPIS stands for buy online, pick up in store: the customer orders on the website and collects the purchase at a physical location instead of waiting for delivery. The model sits between ecommerce and brick-and-mortar retail, and it comes with siblings: BORIS (buy online, return in store) and ROPIS (reserve online, pay in store). Retailers run BOPIS because it converts online demand without shipping cost and pulls customers into stores; customers choose it for speed and to skip delivery risk entirely.
For a support team, BOPIS retail replaces one question with several. Delivery orders generate "where is my order". Pickup orders generate "is my order ready", "how long will you hold it", "can someone else collect it", "can I switch this to shipping", and "the store says they cannot find it". Each answer lives in the live order record: whether the picking is done, which location has the item, what the hold window is, and whether the order was already collected. A scripted reply cannot answer any of them, because the answer changes order by order and hour by hour.
Delivery order vs BOPIS order support at a glance
| Dimension | Delivery order | BOPIS order |
|---|---|---|
| Highest-volume question | Where is my order? | Is my order ready? |
| Source of truth | Carrier scan history | Store fulfillment state |
| Time pressure | Days, set by transit | Hours, set by the hold window |
| Common exception | Stalled or lost shipment | Item not found at pickup |
Aide, the agentic AI platform for customer experience, answers pickup-order questions the same way it answers shipping ones: from the live order state, not a template. It reads whether the order is picked and ready, answers in the customer's language, and routes the genuine exceptions, a missing item, an expired hold, to the right team with the order attached. See how order-grounded resolution works in Aide for ecommerce customer service.
Frequently asked questions
- What does BOPIS stand for?
- Buy online, pick up in store. Related models are BORIS (buy online, return in store) and ROPIS (reserve online, pay in store).
- Why does BOPIS increase support volume?
- Because it adds a fulfillment handoff the customer can see. Ready-time questions, hold-window questions, and pickup problems all land in the support queue, and each one needs the live order record to answer.
- Can AI handle BOPIS support questions?
- Yes, when it reads live order and fulfillment state rather than replying from a script. Ready-status and hold-window questions are bounded, high-volume, and answerable from data, which makes them strong early candidates for automation.