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Data Rich, Information Poor: The Conundrum of the Distribution Center

We live in a world that is bathed in data...and yet too often that data yields little in terms of information. Today, data proliferates business, but the worth of that data can only be measured by the insights derived from it.

Further, we need data that we can substantiate from other relevant metrics and that we can act upon effectively. Currently, we lack (and hopefully are evolving) a framework and a systematic approach to analyzing even unstructured data in an unstructured manner. We need to track the intelligence gleaned from it until we find interesting insights that impact a real business problem.

That is the next frontier of data analytics, which can be further substantiated by simulations and or even prediction markets. Consider this scenario: A corporate project is potentially in trouble. Everyone in the organization knows it, except the vice president who owns the project. The failure comes, and the company brand is soiled and the VP and his people are all fired, and the company's stock price tanks. What if the employees, those on the ground, were allowed to share their belief on the potential outcome in a regulated way? Then, the VP would have data around the potential perceived success. Of course, this wouldn't work in every scenario (which as when the management team is trying to effect revolutionary change), but it's interesting to think about.

During a post pilot review meetings in which I was involved, a distribution center (DC) manager expressed his frustration about the three to four hours daily that his supervisors were spending collecting data on the organization's operators in order to answer seemingly simple questions like:

  1. How much work was done? How many picks were done?

  2. Did the operators meet their targets?

  3. Did anything hinder the operators from doing what they were supposed to do? (For example, with replenishments, often the pickers will have to wait when the bins run out of product because the bins will have to be replenished from the reserve locations.)

  4. How are new hires performing compared to the veteran workers?

  5. How long does it really take to fully onboard the new hires?

  6. How long does it take for new hires to perform consistently and match the corporate standards?

In addition, when employees see that managers are not measuring or measuring inaccurately, therirs a temptation to slack off their work. The age old adage is so true, "What cannot be measured cannot be managed." if you want to really manage something effectively, you have to measure it and every one needs to know how they are being measured and what successful performance metrics are.

I remember one client that was plagued by a warehouse management system (WMS) that, for various reasons, wasn't producing the expected throughput. I went to a senior manager but was met with nothing but anger and frustration. He was angry ,because the DC throughput was almost half of what was promised to them during the WMS sales cycle. Eventually, I figured out the bottlenecks that were slowing them down, addressed them and helped them get back on track. At the end of the project, here are the questions that were looming:

  • Hey how do we make sure we keep this going?

  • How do we make sure we maintain this level of efficiency and productivity?

  • How do we make sure we all know that we are consistently performing to these metrics? Or there is an alert or a red flag that pops up if we slack?

  • Also how do we keep ourselves on top of this, especially when the business is changing dynamically? A good example is shift of commerce from Retail to e-commerce and to mobile these days.)

Then someone suggested displaying a service level metrics for the departments, so the supervisors can proactively showcase their metrics, instead of waiting until other departments or customers start to complain.

With the evolution of Internet of Things (IoT), data is proliferating and mobile devices are loaded with all kinds of sensors, accelerometers, gyroscopes, pedometers etc. It is often possible to gather vital intelligence to measure the efficacy of the processes and operations in a distribution center pretty quickly.

In any DC, the biggest expenses are labor and supplies. Often, DC personnel don't focus as much on inventory cost because it is outside their control. The inventory/merchandise needs to be really managed throughout the whole supply chain. If it is something that is owned by the retailer or distributor, then they care about the accuracy of the inventory count and location of inventory.

As I said, the two most important expenses executives care about are the labor expenses and supplies. While managing labor, it is very important to manage unproductive travel time, for example. Unproductive travel time can be measured easily by monitoring the number of steps the operators walk or travel during the entire course of the day. If an operator that walks a lot but gets little work done, it needs to be flagged and addressed. That's just one way that data could be actionable.

Let us know what activities you monitor and how you leverage that good information to optimize spend in the comments section below.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR 

Puga Sankara is the CEO and Founder of Smart Gladiator. Smart Gladiator is an ATDC Georgia Tech company, Smart Gladiator's award-winning product LoadProof (https://feature.loadproof.com/loadproof) is an Enterprise Photo Documentation System that is enjoying tremendous traction in the Supply Chain Community. LoadProof (https://feature.loadproof.com/loadproof) is a patent pending Centralized Cloud based Enterprise Photo Documentation System for Supply Chain. It is built on the premise that photos and videos are vital documentation serving as compelling proof of important operations performed in the supply chain within and across organizations. These operations may be related to fulfilling customer orders, meeting contractual obligations, or transferring merchandise across different parties taking part in the Supply Chain operations. LoadProof is as important for your organization as an ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) which is an enterprise system of record for critical documents such as Purchase Orders, Sales Orders, Contracts between parties etc. that have tremendous legal ramifications, or a WMS (Warehouse Management System), that holds indispensable information related to orders shipment/fulfilment data. Just like Instagram, Facebook or Snapchat have evolved into platforms that enable individuals to showcase how pretty they or their clothes are, LoadProof is a similar Enterprise system of record that holds photos, not so much for show off, but to serve as compelling, unequivocal, thoroughly documented proof, even in the court of law when there is a dispute between organizations while they perform many facets of their functions/operations, as well as for increased visibility and transparency within the Supply Chain. The capabilities of LoadProof are discussed in detail in the next sections of the document below. LoadProof is live in 460+ Sites, 250+ corporates, 13 Countries.There are more testimonials in this link here also https://www.g2.com/products/loadproof/reviews. Learn more here on our YouTube channel,  https://youtube.com/@smartgladiatorloadproof  & also here in LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/smartgladiator/

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