Title: Warehouse Operations
1Warehouse Operations
2What is Warehouse ?
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- A warehouse is a large building where goods are
stored, and where they may be catalogued,
shipped, or received, depending upon the type.
Though in the past, many warehouses, often
located in industrial areas sometimes next to
major shipping ports, were teeming with workers,
the modern warehouse may be either completely or
totally automated depending upon how advanced the
company is.
3What is Warehouse ?
- Warehouses have existed for several centuries,
and the word itself is not hard to understand.
Wares were the things possessed by a seller and
to house these in a central location meant your
were storing your wares.getting in new products,
and shipping out products already stored.
4What is Warehouse ?
- Another important part of maintaining a good
warehouse is keeping inventory of what products
are presently in the warehouse, what has been
shipped and what has been received.
5Warehouse Functions
- Provide temporary storage
- Put together an order
- Serve as a customer service facility
- Protect goods
- Perform value added services
- Inventory
6The Value Chain
Firm Structure
Human Resource Development
Supporting Activities
Technology Development
Procurement
Operations
Outbound Logistics
Marketing and Sales
Services
7Warehouse Functions
- - Warehouse organizes and repackages product
- - Product arrives packaged on a large scale and
leaves packages on a smaller scale - The smaller the handling unit, the greater the
handling cost
8Processes of reorganization of product
- Inbound Processes
- Receiving
- Put away/Storage
- Outbound Processes
- Processing customer orders
- Order-picking
- Checking
- Packing
- Shipping
9Receiving
- Unloading and staging for put away
- Inspection (Sampling and/or 100)
- Scanned for registering to
- Confirm its availability
- Confirm ownership
- Normally, receiving is accounted for about 10 of
W/H operations cost.
10Put-away
- Before product can be put away, an appropriate
storage location must be determined - Where the product is stored is directly related
to how quick and what cost to retrieve it later
11Put-away
- W/H manager must know at all time that
- Which storage locations are available
- How large they are
- How much weight they can take
- After product is put away, its location must be
recorded - Cost of put away is about 15 of W/H operating
expenses
12Process of customer orders
- On receipt of customer orders the warehouse must
perform checks such as to verify that inventory
is available to ship - The warehouse must produce a pick list to guide
the order picking - The order picking include assigning operators and
sequence of order picking and shipping
13Order Picking
- Order picking account for 55 of warehouse
operations cost, it can be broken down to - Traveling 55
- Searching 15
- Extracting 10
- Paper work and other 20
- of total order picking cost
14Order Picking
- Depend on type of storage and retrieval system
- Person-to-item
- Item-to-person
- Manual or ASRS
- Terminology used in order picking operations
- Pick-sheet or pick line
- Pick/visit
- Pick face
- Pick density ( of picks per foot of travel)
15Order Picking
- Flow time is a main indicator for picking
performance - Short flow time can lead to better service and
responsiveness - Flow time depend on
- how large the unit load, serial or parallel
pickers - Number of pickers
16Order Picking
- If the total work to pick and load a truck is
small, one picker may be assign to each order - If the orders to pick and load are large or span
distant region, several pickers are needed to
shorten the flow time
17Order Picking
- For a warehouse that move a lot of small products
for each of many customers, such as shipping to
retail stores, order picking may be organized as
an assembly line - The assembly line needs to be balance using some
line balancing techniques
18Checking and Packing
- Packing can be very labor intensive
- Every item needs to be handled but with minimal
walking - Then, checking can be performed simultaneously to
make sure completeness of order - Incomplete order leads to return which is
expensive
19Checking and Packing
- Packing must aim at minimizing broken space when
shipping - Also, customers want orders in as few containers
as possible to avoid excessive handling cost
20Shipping
- Shipping generally handles larger units than
picking - Less labor intensive
- Goal is to
- minimize transportation cost
- Protect goods
- Ease load and unloading
21Warehouse Management Systems
-Highly automated system that runs day-to-day
operations of a DC -Controls item putaway,
picking, packing, and shipping -Features transport
ation management order management yard
management labor management warehouse optimization
22A WMS
23Vendor-Managed Inventory
Manufacturers generate orders, not distributors
or retailers Stocking information is accessed
using EDI A first step towards supply chain
collaboration Increased speed, reduced errors,
and improved service
24Warehouse Management System (WMS)
- The main function of WMS are to track all product
arriving and shipping out - It most fundamental capability is to record
receipt of inventory into the warehouse and
register its shipment out (including financial
transaction)
25Warehouse Management System (WMS)
- Another important function are
- Ability to do storage allocation
- Routing of material handling equipment
- Track every place that product can be stored
- Known as stock locator system
26Manu Features of WMS
- Basic features
- Appointment scheduling
- Receiving
- Quality assurance
- Put away
- Location tracking
- Work-order management
- Picking
- Packing and consolidating
- Shipping
27Manu Features of WMS
- High-end features
- Cycle counting
- Replenishment
- Yard management
- Labor management
- Value-added service
- Etc.
28Manu Features of WMS
- WMSs are extending their functionality to
support activities in supply chain both upstream
and downstream like - EXE technologies
- Manhattan Associates
- MARC Global System
- Swisslog Software
- etc
29Materials Handling
30Materials Handling
- Material handling is an activity that uses the
right method to provide the right amount of the
right material at the right place, at the right
time, in the right sequence, in the right
position and at the right cost
31Materials Handling (Cont)
- Systems perspective
- 20-70 of product cost attributed to material
handling
32Unit Load
- Unit load - number of items or bulk material
arranged so they can be picked up and delivered
as one load - Large or small?
- If large, cost/unit handled decreases
- But, depending upon
- cost of unitizing, de-unitizing
33Unit Load (Cont)
- space required for material handling
- material handling carrier payload
- work-in-process inventory costs
- storage and return of empty pallets or containers
used to hold the unit load - smaller unit load may be desired
34Unit Load (Cont)
- Seven steps to design a unit load
- Unit load concept applicable?
- Select the unit load type
- Identify most remote source of load
- Determine farthest practicable destination for
load
35Unit Load (Cont)
- Establish unit load size
- Determine unit load configuration
- Determine how to build unit load
36Material Handling Device Types
- Conveyors
- Palletizers
- Pallet Lifting Devices
- Trucks
- Robots
37Material Handling Device Types (Cont)
- AGVs
- Jibs, Cranes and Hoists
- Warehouse MHSs
38Conveyors
- Accumulation
- Belt
- Bucket
- Can
- Chain
39Conveyors (Cont)
- Chute
- Gravity
- Pneumatic or vacuum
- Power and free
- Roller
40Conveyors (Cont)
- Screw
- Skid
- Slat
- Tow line
- Trolley
- Wheel
41Trucks
- Hand truck
- Fork-lift truck
- Pallet truck
- Platform truck
- Counterbalanced truck
- Tractor-trailer truck
- AGV
42Robots
- Point-to-point
- Contouring or continuous path
- Walkthrough or teach
- Lead through or teach pendant
- Hydraulic
- Servo-controlled
43MHSs in Action
- Europe Combined Terminals (ECT)
- ECT - one of largest in world and largst in
Europe - Goods shipped from and to Europe
- Built on reclaimed land in the North Sea
- Large and Small containers
44MHSs in Action (Cont)
- Trucks wait to be off-loaded by straddle carrier
- Carrier takes container to holding area
- Shipped in approximately 2 days
- Mobile gantry cranes on tracks deposit containers
in forward area
45MHSs in Action (Cont)
- Mobile gantry cranes hold containers in top four
corners and deposit on waiting AGVs - Fleet of AGVs in forward area take containers to
tower cranes - Tower cranes deposit load on ship bed
- Procedure reversed for off-loading ship
46AGVs
- Classification of MHS
- Synchronous systems
- Asynchronous systems
- Synchronous systems, e.g. conveyors, used in
continuous processes or heavy traffic, discrete
parts environments
47AGVs (Cont)
- Asynchronous systems, e.g., AGV, AS/RS, fork-lift
trucks, monorails, cranes and hoists used in
light traffic, discrete parts environments when
material handling flexibility desired
48Design and Control Problems in AGVSs
- Material flow network
- Location of pick-up/drop-off (P/D) points
- Number and type of AGVs
- AGV Assignments to material transfer requests
- AGV routing and dispatching
49Design and Control Problems in AGVSs (Cont)
- Strategies for resolving route conflicts, so AGV
throughput rate is maximized, an other costs
(purchase, maintenance and operating costs of
AGVs, computer control devices, and the material
flow network, as well as inventory costs and
production equipment idle costs incurred due to
excessive material transfer and wait times), are
minimized