Guides
8 February 2026
12 min read

What is Van Sales? Guide to Direct Store Delivery in SA

Learn what van sales and direct store delivery (DSD) meann distributors. Understand how it works, its benefits over pre-sales, and how technology is transforming FMCG distribution across the country.

Sarah Mitchell
Distribution Technology Specialist

What is Van Sales? A Complete Guide to Direct Store Delivery

If you distribute FMCG products, beverages, or other consumer goods, you have almost certainly encountered the term "van sales." But what exactly does it mean, and why is this distribution model so critical to the market? This guide breaks down everything you need to know about van sales, also known as direct store delivery (DSD), and how it works in the international context.

Understanding Van Sales

Van sales is a distribution method where a sales representative loads a vehicle with stock and drives a predetermined route, selling and delivering products directly to retail outlets on the same visit. Unlike traditional pre-sales models where an order is placed first and delivered later, van sales combines the selling and delivery steps into a single interaction.

How Van Sales Works in Practice

A typical van sales day follows this workflow:

  1. Morning Load-Out: The driver-salesperson arrives at the depot, reviews their route plan, and loads their van with the day's inventory based on historical demand and planned targets.
  2. Route Execution: They drive to each retail outlet on their route — this could be corner stores in local neighborhoods, independent superettes, forecourt convenience stores, or even bars and restaurants.
  3. In-Store Selling: At each stop, the rep assesses shelf stock, discusses promotions, takes an order from available inventory, and delivers the goods immediately.
  4. Cash or Credit Settlement: Payment is often collected on the spot, either in cash, via EFT, or against a credit account.
  5. End-of-Day Reconciliation: At the end of the route, the driver returns to the depot. Remaining stock is counted, cash is reconciled, and the day's transactions are finalised.

This model is sometimes called "cash van" or "mobile distribution" depending on the industry and region.

Van Sales in the international Market

international's retail landscape is uniquely suited to van sales. The formal retail sector — dominated by major retail chains — often uses centralised warehouse distribution. But the informal and independent retail sector, which accounts for a significant share of FMCG sales, relies heavily on direct store delivery.

Key Industries Using Van Sales in SA

  • FMCG and Groceries: Bread, snacks, confectionery, dairy products, and canned goods are frequently distributed via van sales to independent retailers, corner stores, and street vendors.
  • Beverages: Soft drinks, bottled water, and alcoholic beverages are classic van sales categories. National beverage companies and major brewery distributors have operated extensive van sales networks for decades.
  • Bakeries: Many bakeries across Northeast, KZN, and the West Coast distribute fresh bread and baked goods daily via van sales routes.
  • Tobacco and Confectionery: Smaller, high-frequency product categories that need direct delivery to thousands of small outlets.
  • Personal Care and Cleaning Products: Products like soap, detergent, and toiletries distributed to convenience retail and wholesale outlets.

Why Van Sales Thrives in SA

Several factors make van sales particularly effective in the market:

  • Fragmented Retail Landscape: international has an estimated 100,000+ corner stores and independent retailers, many of which cannot be served through traditional wholesale channels.
  • Immediate Availability: Many small retailers operate on thin cash reserves and cannot afford to place large advance orders. Van sales lets them buy what they need, when they need it.
  • Cash Economy: A significant portion of convenience retail transactions are cash-based. Van sales accommodates immediate cash settlement.
  • Infrastructure Challenges: In rural areas and neighborhoods, logistics infrastructure can be limited. A van that comes directly to the store solves last-mile delivery challenges.
  • Relationship Selling: international retail culture, particularly in independent and independent retail, is built on personal relationships. The regular van sales visit reinforces trust and loyalty.

Benefits of Van Sales Over Pre-Sales

While the pre-sales model has its own advantages, van sales offers several distinct benefits:

1. Faster Order-to-Delivery Cycle

There is no waiting period between placing an order and receiving stock. The retailer gets their products the moment they buy them.

2. Reduced Out-of-Stock Situations

Because the rep can see shelf conditions in real-time and has stock on the van, they can immediately fill gaps. This reduces lost sales for both the distributor and the retailer.

3. Lower Administrative Overhead

Without a separate order processing and delivery scheduling step, the administrative burden is reduced. One person handles the entire transaction.

4. Better Cash Flow

Immediate payment collection — particularly in cash — improves cash flow compared to pre-sales models where invoices may go unpaid for 30, 60, or even 90 days.

5. Stronger Customer Relationships

The same person sells and delivers, building a consistent relationship with each store owner. This personal touch is especially valuable in the international convenience retail.

6. Flexibility and Responsiveness

Van sales reps can adapt on the fly — adjusting quantities, introducing new products, or responding to competitive activity — all within a single visit.

Challenges of Van Sales

Van sales is not without its challenges, particularly in the international context:

  • Vehicle Costs and Maintenance: Maintaining a fleet of delivery vehicles is expensive, especially with fluctuating fuel prices and the condition of rural roads in some provinces.
  • Cash Handling Risks: Carrying cash in certain areas poses security risks. Robbery and theft are real concerns for van sales teams operating in high-crime areas.
  • Stock Management Complexity: Loading the right quantity and mix of products requires accurate forecasting. Overloading wastes fuel and creates returns; underloading means missed sales.
  • Route Optimisation: Covering a large geographic territory efficiently requires careful route planning, which is difficult to do manually's diverse geography.
  • Load Shedding Impact: Power outages can disrupt depot operations, affect cold chain products, and interfere with digital payment systems.

Technology Requirements for Modern Van Sales

Gone are the days when van sales was managed with paper invoices and manual stock counts. Modern van sales operations depend on technology to remain competitive and efficient.

Essential Technology Components

  • Mobile Sales App: A handheld or tablet application that enables the rep to process orders, generate invoices, capture signatures, and record payments in real-time — even offline.
  • Route Planning Software: Tools that optimise delivery routes based on customer locations, traffic patterns, and delivery windows.
  • Inventory Management: Real-time stock tracking on the van, synced with the depot's warehouse management system.
  • GPS Tracking: Fleet tracking to monitor driver locations, verify customer visits, and ensure route adherence.
  • Digital Payments: Integration with card machines, SnapScan, or EFT to reduce cash handling.
  • Reporting and Analytics: Dashboards that give managers visibility into sales performance, route efficiency, and stock levels.

The Role of Van Sales Software

A dedicated van sales software solution integrates all of these components into a single platform. Instead of juggling separate apps for ordering, invoicing, stock management, and reporting, a unified system streamlines the entire process.

Key features to look for in van sales software for the market include:

  • Offline functionality — essential for areas with poor mobile coverage, particularly in rural and remote regions.
  • Multi-currency and VAT support — automated tax calculations compliant with tax requirements.
  • Load-out and return management — tracking exactly what leaves the depot and what comes back.
  • Customer credit management — setting credit limits and tracking outstanding balances per outlet.
  • Integration with accounting systems — syncing with Sage, Xero, or other accounting platforms popular in SA.

Getting Started with Van Sales

If you are considering implementing or upgrading a van sales operation, here are the key steps:

  1. Assess Your Market: Identify which of your customers or target outlets are best served by van sales versus other distribution methods.
  2. Plan Your Routes: Map out territories and routes based on customer density, geographic spread, and delivery frequency.
  3. Choose the Right Technology: Invest in a van sales software platform that supports offline operation, real-time sync, and integrates with your existing systems.
  4. Train Your Team: Van sales reps need to be skilled in both selling and logistics. Invest in training on the technology, product knowledge, and customer relationship management.
  5. Monitor and Optimise: Use data from your van sales system to continuously refine routes, adjust stock loading, and improve sales performance.

Conclusion

Van sales remains one of the most effective distribution models for reaching international's vast and fragmented retail market. By combining selling and delivery into a single visit, it delivers speed, flexibility, and personal service that other models struggle to match. With the right technology and processes in place, van sales can be a powerful competitive advantage for distributors, FMCG companies, and beverage businesses operating across the country.

Whether you are running a small bakery delivery operation in San Francisco or managing a national beverage distribution network, understanding and optimising your van sales operation is essential for growth in the market.

Tags:
#Van Sales#DSD#Distribution#international

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