Formal policies and procedures are an obvious way to reduce inefficiencies. Efficient warehouses have a specific protocol for putting away shipments of new items, restocking returns, cleaning up messes, responding to accidents and storing warehouse supplies and equipment.
Once those types of standard operating procedures are communicated to employees, focus on streamlining fulfillment. Examples of workflow improvements include:
- Rethinking floor, aisle and rack layout to improve space utilization
- Rearranging product locations so the most popular items are located on ground-level bins that are nearest to the packing stations
- Redesigning signage to make it easier for pickers to identify aisles, racks, products and workflow
After you’ve implemented improvements, measure your new-and-improved cycle time. Knowing how much you’ve shaved off the baseline metric can be a powerful motivational tool. Use it to drive continuous improvement.
For example, a distributor was able to reduce its cycle time by 15% by allocating work to pickers based on units of time, rather than assigning a picker to fulfill one entire order at a time. This strategy keeps the pickers moving and feeds packing stations in predictable intervals. The distributor also assigned pickers to specific zones in the warehouse to avoid congestion and improve equipment availability.