Logistics automation explained

Logistics automation is the application of computer software or automated machinery to logistics operations in order to improve its efficiency. Typically this refers to operations within a warehouse or distribution center, with broader tasks undertaken by supply chain engineering systems and enterprise resource planning systems.

Logistics automation systems can powerfully complement the facilities provided by these higher level computer systems. The focus on an individual node within a wider logistics network allows systems to be highly tailored to the requirements of that node.

Components

thumb|Factory automation with KUKA industrial robots for palletizing food products like bread and toast at a bakery in Germany

Logistics automation systems comprise a variety of hardware and software components:

these are handheld or truck-mounted terminals which connect by radio to logistics automation software and provide instructions to operators moving throughout the warehouse. Many also have barcode scanners to allow identification of containers more quickly and accurately than manual keyboard entry.

Benefits of logistics automation

A typical warehouse or distribution center will receive stock of a variety of products from suppliers and store these until the receipt of orders from customers, whether individual buyers (e.g. mail order), retail branches (e.g. chain stores), or other companies (e.g. wholesalers). A logistics automation system may provide the following:

A complete warehouse automation system can drastically reduce the workforce required to run a facility, with human input required only for a few tasks, such as picking units of product from a bulk packed case.[1] Even here, assistance can be provided with equipment such as pick-to-light units. Smaller systems may only be required to handle part of the process. Examples include automated storage and retrieval systems, which simply use cranes to store and retrieve identified cases or pallets, typically into a high-bay storage system which would be unfeasible to access using fork-lift trucks or any other means. The use of Automatic Guided Vehicles maximizes the output compared to humans since they can do repetitive tasks for long hours and with least to no supervision. An AGV is built and programmed for precision and accuracy thereby reducing the chances of errors in a warehouse, especially when dealing with fragile goods.[2]

Automation software

Software or cloud-based SaaS solutions are used for logistics automation which helps the supply chain industry in automating the workflow as well as management of the system.[3] Knowledge @ Wharton staff writers noted in 2011 that some manufacturers and retailers were weathering the 2008 global economic downturn "by signing up for pay-as-you-go logistics services available through the Internet 'cloud'". They identified the benefits and reduced costs which came from sharing information about shipments with suppliers, hauliers and end users.[4]

There is little generalized software available in this market. This is because there is no rule to generalize the system as well as work flow even though the practice is more or less the same. Most of the commercial companies do use one or the other of the custom solutions.

But there are various software solutions that are being used within the departments of logistics. There are a few departments in Logistics, namely: Conventional Department, Container Department, Warehouse, Marine Engineering, Heavy Haulage, etc.

Software used in these departments
Improving Effectiveness of Logistics Management
  1. Logistical Network
  2. Information
  3. Transportation
  4. Sound Inventory Management
  5. Warehousing, Materials Handling & Packaging

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Benefits of Logistics Warehouse Automation. 2022-10-27 . aeologic.com . 27 October 2022 . en-US.
  2. Web site: Integrated Technologies for Logistical Efficiency - SIPMM Publications . 2022-09-04 . publication.sipmm.edu.sg . 13 July 2022 . en-US.
  3. http://www.gtnexus.com/blog/cloud-technology-platform/get-your-head-out-of-the-clouds/ Get Your Head Out of the Clouds
  4. Knowledge @ Wharton staff writers, Supply-chain Management: Growing Global Complexity Drives Companies into the 'Cloud', published 12 January 2011, accessed 23 May 2024