Through the use of these six automation elements, manufacturers can improve inventory management in a number of ways.
We are breaking down our 'Inventory Management for Manufacturing' guide into digestible sections. You can get the full inventory management guide here.
Efficiency Gains through Improved Performance: Business process automation streamlines manual tasks like inventory data collection. Artificial intelligence and automation can be used to input and track data, which is then stored for later reporting and analytics.
Streamlining a variety of tasks improves efficiencies as well as overall warehouse performance, not to mention reducing errors inherent in manual processes.
Manufacturers also can use physical automation technologies for an additional level of automation, including autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) driverless automated guided vehicles (AGVs) to automated storage and retrieval systems (ASRs). Each type of automation offers a host of efficiency gains while vastly improving warehouse performance.
By streamlining operations throughout all aspects of the warehouse, there are fewer opportunities for error—and this leads to happier customers and business partners. Inventory moves faster and more accurately, and customers and partners reap the benefits of a better overall experience.
That improved customer satisfaction boosts both sales and brand. Warehouse automation not only improves operations today, it prepares businesses for an increasingly competitive landscape with very little room for error and inefficiency.
Warehouse automation doesn't just streamline inventory and warehouse operations. It helps create a healthier inventory by reducing lost products, shrinkage, and misplacement. Manufacturers gain a granular level of management when it comes to inventory control, which translates to fewer fulfillment and shipping errors.
Automation solutions can also help coordinate the usage of material-handling equipment like barcode scanners and mobile devices. This further improves efficiencies and helps contribute to tighter inventory control. That also means manufacturers can reduce or eliminate staging in support of just-in-time methodologies for order fulfillment, creating even more efficiencies.
Read the next section, Process vs. Physical Automation: Warehouse Automation