Warehouse Management: How To Make Warehouse Operations Run Smoothly for Scaling Brands

warehouse mgmt

Illustration by Jennifer Tapias Derch

It’s no secret that the logistics industry is in despair. In Q4 of 2021, the availability of warehouse spacewas just 5.6%. That’s an all-time low and dramatic fall from the 8.5% reported at the start of 2016.

As a result, retailers are being pushed to squeeze as much value out of each square foot.

From the way they store inventory to the method of picking orders, strong warehouse management processes help retailers run their warehouses like a well-oiled machine. This guide shares how.

Table of contents

What is warehouse management?

Warehouse management is the set of operational processes that help a warehouse run efficiently.These processes include tracking inventory levels, locating goods, managing staff schedules, fulfilling orders, and optimizing warehouse space.

The benefits of having warehouse management technology

The global supply chain is in disarray. Manufacturing and shipping times are much longer than they once were—an issue not set to resolve itself anytime soon. McKinsey reports that significant disruptions to manufacturing production now occur every3.7 years, with reasons ranging from political instability to natural disasters.

Ultimately, a warehouse management system (WMS) will help you speed up your receiving, cycle counting, and fulfillment, resulting in more efficient processes and reduced labor costs.”

—Nick Malinowski, Co-founder ofOTW Shipping

A WMS that syncs with yourinventory management systemhelps you stay one step ahead, hence why38% of the merchantswe surveyed plan to integrate technology to help their company anticipate disruptions and demand.

在一个,您将看到库存水平下降to prioritize replenishment. If you know that one bestselling SKU sells 500 units per week, but it takes three weeks to receive shipments from a supplier, for example, set an alert to notify you once stock levels drop below 2,000 (leaving extra leeway in case a spanner is thrown into the works.)

Using a warehouse management system, you’ll be able to track every product in your warehouse and help boost your customer experience by giving them accurate visibility on your product’s availability.”

—Perry Valentine, Founder ofAtPerry’s

Combine those alerts with historical data for accurate inventory forecasting, using your WMS. Every item in your warehouse is costing you money, both in storage fees and opportunity costs. Poorly performing inventory is taking space that should be given to higher volume, faster moving, and ultimately, more profitable stock.

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Ben Clarke, interim Head of Marketing forJames and James Ecommerce Fulfilment, says, “By ensuring that products are always shelved in the most efficient way possible, and by providing real-time visibility of stock levels, awarehouse management systemcan help avoid overstocking or running out of popular items. This can save significant amounts of money on inventory carrying costs.”

Inventory management and warehouse management: How do they work together?

The key to success in global ecommerce is to sell in the channels where your customers are. Fromsocial media storefrontstomobile commerce, thismulti-channel retail strategy是出了名的零售商很难把握啊n. You never want to promote a product on one channel, only for the customer to fall at the last hurdle: the product being unavailable.

Unlike warehouse management software, which manages the entire operation of running a warehouse,inventory management software(IMS) is responsible only for managing inventory within it. Retailers can use this technology to:

  • Record receiving inventory
  • Monitor stock levels across various warehouses
  • Show order fulfillment rates

An IMS is a subsection of the warehouse management process, hence why it should be integrated with your WMS. Use the inventory software to track data and forecast demand. The WMS will pull this data and streamline how warehouse staff source inventory, like displaying the location of a single SKU within a 10,000 square foot warehouse.

Warehouse management processes

Inventory control

进入你的仓库库存需要考查ed and approved prior to being placed on the shelves, ready to be sold. Suppliers can send the wrong quantities or the wrong product entirely—problems that often are exasperated by manual processes and human error.

A WMS alleviates this problem with putaway management. Using bar code scanners to track incoming shipments, your WMS compares the shipment against your purchase order from that supplier. Any discrepancies will be flagged before inventory is put away in the warehouse.

Inventory tracking

At its core, the primary job of a warehouse is to store inventory. It’s a safe place for you to hold merchandise until it’s sold and shipped to a customer.

Having access to real-time inventory data helped us identify gaps in our shelf replenishment practices that caused stockouts. Meeting customer demands—especially during the busy holiday season—required us to create a well-planned roadmap showing when to restock, what to restock, and how to restock.”

—Shaunak Amin, Co-founder and CEO ofSnackmagic

A warehouse management solution displays inventory location data on one simple interface. See the location of each SKU and how many units are available for sale, with many WMSs offering demand forecasting features to prevent stockouts.

“Knowing how your inventory looks can also aid in inventory optimization,” says Lily Wili, CEO ofEver Wallpaper. “You can not only restock things as needed, but you can also spot problems like overstocking. This may enable you to take corrective action, such as lowering the volume of your next order or shifting inventory between sites to maintain ideal levels.”

Order fulfillment

Modern consumers have a long list of demands they need brands to meet. For many, the speed of delivery is the top.

Some60% of shoppersconsider delivery speed in their decision to purchase, beaten only by free shipping—something no longer considered a nice-to-have. Almost seven in 10 Shopify merchants now offer this option, with ecommerce giant Amazon setting the tone for one- or same-day delivery.

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A WMS streamlines this order fulfillment process and helps warehouse staff pick, pack, and ship orders within as little time as possible. The technology will:

  1. Print a packing slip containing details of a customer’s order
  2. Show the location in which the item is being stored
  3. Print a shipping label with the customer’s address

This speedy order processing gets products to your customers as soon as possible, meeting cutoff dates forone- or same-day shipping, and giving your warehouse staff more time to process orders that follow.

Shipping and order tracking

Your warehouse processes aren’t over once a product leaves it. A good WMS has order tracking capabilities to show:

  • When a parcel was shipped
  • Its current location
  • The shipping carrier used
  • 估计交货日期or its final location

Parcel transparency is important to consumers, with almostseven in 10 shoppersbeing less likely to shop with a retailer if their package was delayed without being informed. Use a self-serve portal, such as the one found inShop App, that shows the location of their order at any time. It’s your WMS that will pull this data once an order has been marked as fulfilled in a distribution center.

Monitor weather, global supply chain issues, and other factors that could cause delays, and proactively communicate delays via email and on your website.”

—Kurt Ellis, President ofGLF E-Commerce Fulfillment

Returns management

It’s inevitable that some products shipped from your warehouse will make their way back. Research puts thereturn rate for items bought onlineat 20%, trumping the 9% average for purchases made in-store. Use warehouse management software to process returns, approve them for refunds, relabel inventory, and get them back on the shelf.

The best part? Data from your WMS can be used to preempt returns from plaguing your warehouse.

As Kurt Ellis, president ofGLF E-Commerce Fulfillment,解释说,“从仓库数据驱动的见解nd inventory management software can also be used to identify customer behavior patterns and help make policy adjustments, like limiting the number of items a customer can buy in different sizes or colors to reduce the rate of returns, and help avoid the need to discount unwanted items.”

Labor management

Labor shortages at all points in the supply chain are causing significant disruption. So much so,CNBC reportsthat the entire industry is simply understaffed.

For warehouses in particular, logistics managers say their inability to attract and retain a qualified workforce istheir biggest problem, beating outdated inventory storage to poor warehouse layouts.

Keep hold of the employees already inside your warehouse. With a WMS system, merchants can plan resources to keep inventory in the warehouse constantly moving, and employees in their roles. Look for one with workforce management features that help to:

  • Plan staff rotas and shift times (that don’t breach regulations)
  • Assess whether warehouse staff have had the adequate training—be that health and safety training or qualifications in operating machinery—to complete their job
  • Establish KPIs and monitor progress toward them

Warehouse management softwareBlueYonderreports that its clients see a 25% increase in employee engagement using its labor management features. Labor expenses also decreased by 35%.

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Warehouse management best practices

Warehouse management technology has clear advantages for busy warehouses. To maximize efficiency in yours, follow these best practices.

Optimize warehouse layout

Experts suggest thatbetween 22% and 27%of your warehouse’s total square footage should be reserved as inventory storage space. The rest can be allocated to machinery storage, packing areas, and overstocked goods.

Despite this, the layout of your warehouse bears a major impact on how fast you can fulfill customer orders. Optimize your warehouse space by:

  • Placing bestselling items within close proximity to picking areas
  • Leaving enough space between aisles for forklifts and machinery to pick inventory
  • Putting the receiving area near loading bays so pallets of inbound inventory can easily be transported in, with minimal disruption to workers

Make sure your warehouse is well organized and clean. This might seem obvious, but it’s important to have things in their proper place so that staff can easily find what they need.”

—Ben Clarke, interim Head of Marketing ofJames and James Ecommerce Fulfilment

Choose an order picking system

Continuing with the speed theme, help warehouse employees fulfill customer orders faster with an order picking system. It’s a strategy used to determine which items are sourced from the warehouse first, reducing step counts and collecting sold inventory most efficiently.

Options include:

  • Batch picking.The WMS prints a packing list for each order, grouping together customer orders with similar or closeby SKUs. A picker collects inventory from several packing slips simultaneously.
  • Wave picking.With this strategy, warehouse employees also fulfill several orders simultaneously. Packing slips are grouped by inventory zone, shipping date, or SKU similarity. The employee then sources these items in “waves” throughout their shift—like once every half an hour.
  • Zone picking.Used by larger warehouses, this picking strategy works by dividing your warehouse into zones, each housing a particular suite of products. An order picker in each zone sources products from within it. The parcel is then passed to another zone, similar to an assembly line, for another zone pick.

“Our receiving team checks in newly arrived inventory at the beginning of their shift so that we have a clearer picture of what items are available to restock,” says Shaunak Amin, co-founder and CEO ofSnackmagic.

But because there is a great deal of activity in the warehouse, with people filling and packaging orders, the receivers wait to replenish inventory levels at the end of their shift. By topping off inventory at specific points in the day, we can maintain higher inventory levels for the order pickers.”

Localize inventory in different warehouses

Any ecommerce brand with a vision of going global needsinternational warehouses. By stocking inventory in locations in sales hotspots and global trade hubs, such as Houston or London, you’ll expand your geographical footprint.

Orders are sent from their closest warehouse, already cleared from customs—a tactic with the potential toreduce shipping costs by 25%. Customers also have products in their hands within as little time as possible.

As it is our priority to make sure the customer is 100% satisfied, we have taken on the shipping challenges at our warehouse, instead of the customer. For this reason, we have set up 3PL relationships allowing us to fulfill orders closer to the customer. By doing this, we have found that we have more control over our shipping commitments.”

—Eric Farlow, Chief Operating Officer ofManly Bands

Take it from Jason Wong, CEO and founder ofDoe Lashes: “The way we respond is to place our inventory near those cities to reduce the overall miles traveled by those packages. We’re now stocking inventory outside of the country for our international customers, just to reach them faster. We have a warehouse in China and that helps us reach Australia and the whole Southeast Asia region.”

Not only does thislocalizedinventory strategy result in faster orders with fewer carbon emissions, but Doe Lashes’ formula to minimize the distance between products and customers helps it build a supply chain that’s resilient against disruptions.

Automate where possible

The warehouse robotics market is set to reach$9.5 billionby 2025. The surge in valuation derives from the benefits ofecommerce automation—a strategy that takes repetitive tasks off your warehouse employees’ plates.

A mad dash to store, pick, pack, and ship orders leaves room for mistakes. Those mistakes, like adding the wrong product to a parcel, wreak havoc with customer experiences.

Automations and workflows rule out the chance of human error, while also leaving staff more time to focus on higher-impact tasks. For example, if your warehouse management system shows that 500 units are ready for sale but 400 of them are still in the receiving area, useShopify Flowto automatically display a low stock message for that SKU on your ecommerce store.

Nick Malinowski, co-founder ofOTW Shipping, also advises, “If you have the budget, utilize bar code scanners. Not only will this makeinventory managementquicker, but it will also make your pick and pack more accurate.

Higher pick accuracy means fewer returns and corrective orders that need to be compensated by you. The result is happier customers and more five-star reviews!”

Measure warehouse performance

Your warehouse is a machine with many moving parts. Periodically check whether yours is working at its optimal level by paying close attention to these performance metrics:

  • Order fulfillment rate:The percentage of undelivered orders marked as shipped.
  • Orders shipped on time:The percentage of orders shipped within the cutoff date for delivery time you’ve promised a customer.
  • Order accuracy:包裹的百分比与正确的包装items from the packing slip.
  • Orders fulfilled per hour:Benchmark this against order accuracy. It’s great if you increase output from 40 to 75 parcels per hour, but not so much if order accuracy decreases.
  • Hours without reportable accidents:A successful warehouse has minimal safety breaches. The longer you go without an incident, the better.

Find a warehouse management system with these advanced reporting capabilities, such asEasyshiporShipBob. The more data you have, the better decisions you’ll make when operating a busy warehouse.

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Advantages of working with a 3PL for warehouse management

Athird-party logistics provider(3PL) is an external company that handles your logistics and supply chain management process.

You’ll deliver inventory to the 3PL’s warehouse, offloading all warehouse management operations to your partner. They’ll receive order details as soon as they’re processed through your ecommerce store. It’s their job to pick, pack, and ship inventory to your customers—no intervention required.

Many scaling ecommerce brands choose to outsource warehouse management to a 3PL once they have the budget to do so. Here’s why.

Faster, accurate order fulfillment

Warehouse technology has clear impacts on how efficient a distribution center is. Yet investing in your own technology stack is a big commitment. From forklift trucks to picking robots that deliver inventory from a storage shelf to an order picker, you don’t need to purchase machinery outright to benefit from faster order fulfillment times.

A 3PL’s entire business revolves around warehouse management. They’ll absorb the cost of warehouse technology that helps them pick, pack, and ship orders faster and more accurately, such as:

  • RFID scanners
  • Bar code scanners
  • Collaborative robots like Chuck

After all, the sooner they can fulfill one order, the sooner they can move onto the next and get paid by their customer—you.

Watch: 3 Signs You Need a 3PL

Reduce shipping and operational costs

Third-party logistics providers send large volumes of parcels each month. As a result, many shipping carriers provide them with discounted shipping rates—often to persuade the 3PL to continue using their services. Many 3PLs pass on these discounted rates to their customers, making shipping costs cheaper than they would be if parcels were shipped from your own warehouse.

For merchants likeThe Dad Hoodie, relying on SFN for shipping and fulfillment has made a big difference to its bottom line. Average shipping costs have been cut by 40%, with founder Taylor Llewellyn saying, “As a business owner, fulfillment is only something you think about when it isn’t working well, and luckily, I never have to think about it.”

Knowing that we have a premium partner that gets orders out of the warehouse quickly and at a cost we could not achieve elsewhere [means] we’re able to focus on growing our business.”

—Taylor Llewellyn, Founder, The Dad Hoodie

Plus, when you’re using a 3PL’s warehouse, you pay storage and fulfillment fees for its services. The same applies to labor management. Reduce overheads by leaning on warehouse employees already contracted by your 3PL.

Depending on sales volume, employee count, and inventory levels, this could be a much cheaper warehousing option than fronting an entire lease of your own.

Scale internationally

Research shows that32% of brandswill fulfill orders in a new country in 2022. Lean on a 3PL’s existing horde of international warehouses to reach global shoppers in less time, rather than opening up your own in popular warehousing locations with expensive leases.

Take it from Noelle Taylor, senior marketing manager atTaylor Logistics, who says, “Partnering with a 3PL to handle warehouse management allows brands to focus more on what’s important—growing their business and delivering the best possible customer experience.

“Committed 3PLs see their relationship with brands as a long-term partnership. As a result, they may be willing to invest in space, technology, and equipment to take your business to the next level.”

Access warehousing expertise

There’s nothing else for a 3PL provider to focus on other than running an effective warehouse. It’s safe to assume that they’ll have bounds of expertise on how to run one, with tried and tested processes to:

  • Handle order-picking mistakes
  • Maintain employees’ health and safety
  • Package items and reduce damage in transit
  • Manage resources and and provide staff training

As Elliott Davidson, ecommerce consultant atParcel Mastersays, “Not having to think about, and manage, a process as complex as warehouse management, and knowing that someone who specializes in it is taking on the pressures and responsibilities, allows you to focus on other areas of growing your business.”

Reduce carbon footprint

Any business owner with a conscience knows that shipping parcels to the other side of the world has some negative consequences on the environment. Unfortunately, it’s an issue only set to worsen as the years go on. By 2030,parcel deliveries will increase by 78%, resulting in 32% more emissions.

Consumers are becoming increasingly aware of this, and they’re voting with their wallets—preferring brandsthey know are “actively working on reducing their carbon footprint.”

Look for a 3PL that has measures in place to reduce its carbon footprint. From using lightweight packaging made from sustainably sourced materials to LED lighting within the warehouse, customers are already looking for brands who support these climate-friendly options.

What to look for in warehouse management technology

Despite the benefits a warehouse management system has to offer, not all systems are created equal. Find the right WMS software—one that grows as your ecommerce brand does—by asking these questions to potential vendors:

  • What does their order fulfillment process look like?The most effective warehouses and distribution centers use technology to speed up the fulfillment process and maintain accuracy.
  • 提供核心功能业务娘家姓的吗ds?Ask your warehousing team for need-to-haves in any new software—be that repetitive workflows they should be automating or immediate data syncing.
  • How often is inventory counted?Inventory shrinkage costs retailers$61.7 billionper year. Ask your 3PL its process for physical inventory counts. The more frequently both recorded and actual inventory are compared, the quicker any discrepancies can be rectified.
  • How much does it cost?Vendors often have monthly fees to use their WMS, though these can come under different categories. Get the full picture of your investment by asking for implementation, licensing, support, and training costs.
  • Does the WMS integrate with your toolstack?Streamline your entire warehouse operations by choosing a tool that syncs with your ecommerce platform, 3PL company,ERP system, and inventory management software.
  • What are its limitations?From warehouse square footage to inventory levels, choose a WMS that scales with your business. It’ll save the headache of moving to a new one once your sales volumes increase.

As an integral part of your 3PL partnership, the key thing to look at in an international warehouse—beyond, services, space, and pricing—is what technologies they use.”

—Robin H. Smith, Co-founder ofVL OMNI

Take the stress out of warehouse management

Warehouse management is a tough thing to get right manually. By investing in a WMS, repetitive tasks will be taken off your warehousing team’s plate. You’ll improve order accuracy, ship parcels faster, and have the data you need to make the warehouse run at peak efficiency—even when you’rescaling internationally.

About the author

Elise Dopson

Elise Dopson is a freelance writer for leading B2B SaaS companies. She teaches everything she knows throughPeak Freelance.