Six Ways to Maximize Warehousing Operations and Deliveries

Make the most of your warehouse space

Six Ways to Maximize Warehousing Operations and Deliveries

Maximizing space within a warehouse and positioning items to improve efficiency can add up to significant financial and time savings. The layout and design of a warehouse and a distribution network should be an ongoing process. Shippers can improve their warehousing and distribution with these six strategies:

1. Improve Slotting Patterns

Placing high-velocity pick items as close to the door and as tightly together as possible can help warehouses improve their efficiency. In many cases, engineers can help determine where products should be positioned.

To determine which products to stock, shippers can look at and share their historical sales data along with their forecasted demand. That data will not only tell shippers and their warehouse management providers what to stock, but also where to position it.

2. Examine Labor Standards

As a best practice, warehouses should have labor management time standards. Utilizing software can help manage the movement of people and track their productivity. The results should then be evaluated every day after every shift to ensure employees are meeting their productivity standards.

3. Increase Communication

Many companies can have operations throughout multiple divisions, and frequently they operate independently of each other and very little communication exists between the divisions. As a 3PL, that is where Penske can add value and look at their network. We may also find another customer that has complementary activities or different seasons and we can work together.

4. Upgrade Technology

Improving a location's warehouse management software can provide several benefits, including the traceability of products.

5. Create a Contingency Plan

Contingency planning can range from pre-planning for a natural disaster to knowing how to ramp up operations if business increases suddenly. It can mean knowing what you'll need to do if you have to flex to 120 percent, understanding what that looks like and having it pre-defined rather than scrambling to build it.

6. Replenish at the Shelf Level

In some cases, a logistics provider will not only deliver goods they pick up at the warehouse, but will stock customers' shelves as well. Drivers can replenish the end-users' shelves at night when the business is closed.

More and more, that is what companies are looking for. They want a program where they send us a replenishment order and we stock down to the shelf level. This way it is much more customer-service focused.

For those types of relationships to be successful, the drivers receive additional training and gain an understanding of the store managers' preferences. The driver has a relationship with the store manager. It is basically customer service with a delivery attached.

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