{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"DefinedTerm","name":"After-Sales Logistics","description":"Manufacturers, forwarders, and service providers rely on after-sales logistics to manage all physical supply chain flows that follow the initial sale: reverse movements of defective goods, spare parts distribution to dispersed service locations, and coordination of repair and disposal operations. Compared to forward distribution, these flows tend to be more fragmented, time-sensitive, and harder to forecast. For manufacturers of technical equipment—from industrial machinery to consumer electroni","inDefinedTermSet":{"@type":"DefinedTermSet","name":"Frachtportal Logistics Glossary","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary"},"url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary/after-sales-logistics","inLanguage":"en","dateModified":"2026-06-23T14:01:05.260126","citation":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After-sales_service","markdownMirror":"https://www.freight-academy.com/api/md/glossary/en/after-sales-logistics","provider":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Frachtportal","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com"},"quickSummary":"After-Sales Logistics · Manufacturers, forwarders, and service providers rely on after-sales logistics to manage all physical supply chain flows that follow the initial sale: reverse movements of defective goods, spare parts distribution to dispersed service locations, and coordination of repair and disposal operations. · Quelle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After-sales_service"}