Activity Profiling
Activity Profiling
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Home > Material Handling Hotline > July, 2008 > Warehouse Activity Profiling
Identifying Improvement Opportunities in Your Warehouse Operations
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July, 2008
Two main categories of profiles make up a basic warehouse profiling set: customer
order profiles and item activity profiles. Customer order profiles represent the
outbound activity, i.e., how the customers are ordering the products. Item activity
profiles provide insight into viable storing and slotting options for each item within
the warehouse.
There are several types of item profiles, the three most basic are defined next.
Popularity profile- is a ranking of the items based on how often they are ordered or
picked (frequency). Volume profile is a ranking of the items based on how much is
ordered (cube movement). Finally, the item order completion profile displays the
items ranked from most to least popular against the order set. This profile reveals
the percentage of the orders that will be completed by a subset of the items and is
valuable when conducting cost benefit analysis for improved productivity. The
chart in figure 2 shows that 30% of the items complete 90% of all orders. This
information is useful because it allows operations to make improvements, such as
automation of a smaller area, yet still benefit 90% of all orders.
The best way to understand how effective profiles can be is by reviewing some
examples. A tactical then a strategic profiling approach is discussed next.
In a straight forward pick line/zone, the most popular items need to be at the start
of the pick path. This reduces the likelihood of walking to the end of the pick line
to complete an order. In a Branch and Pick Forward Pick Zone, the more popular
items need to be placed near the center aisle minimizing the time spent walking to
the back of each cross aisle. In a Serpentine Forward Pick zone, the more popular
items are placed in the aisles at the start of the tour, thus reducing the chances that
an operator will have to visit every aisle in the zone to pick an order.
It is quite simple (if there are no seasonal or promotional items in the group) to
take item activity information from a warehouse management system or inventory
control system and sort it in order of popularity. Using this information to
rearrange SKUs on shelves or in flow rack, can significantly cut an operators
walking distance and therefore, reduce cost. This is Activity Profiling in its most
simplest form.
If there are a number of promotional or seasonal items in your forward pick area,
or you have introduced a number of new products, the analysis is a little more
difficult. These items need to be isolated and decided on as to whether to include
them in the golden zone within the forward pick area or not. This is done by
generating a graph that looks like figure 4.
By graphing the % By graphing the percent of total days that each item is picked, it
is easy to isolate the popular, seasonal/promotional items. Seasonal items tend to
stick out like a sore thumb on these graphs. They will have high activity but the
percent of days picked will be low. Seasonal/promotional items should be
positioned towards the end of the line or not in the line when out of season.
While people in case pick facilities are usually aware of this opportunity, mangers
of pick and pack operations often overlook other options such as batch label
picking orders. Label picking is fast; pick the item, place it in a shipping container,
apply the label, and put it on the conveyor or pallet going to shipping. This process
bypasses the packing operation altogether.
If you have many multi-line orders, profiling the Order Cube information is
helpful. The results of such an analysis are shown in figure 6. Notice that in this
scenario, almost 60% of the orders require less than a shipping cartons worth of
material. If a large proportion of your orders are multi-line, consider multi-order
picking those orders using carts with multiple slots, each slot dedicated to one
order at a time. The same material handling concept can be applied to larger orders
that are less than a shipping pallets worth of material. In this case a pull-train of
pallets, each order having its own pallet, may be useful. Each of these approaches,
reduces the travel time spent picking orders in the facility.
GETTING STARTED
Now the big question is How do I get started? There are three main sources of
data needed. Since much of this information is usually stored on computers, they
are commonly referred to by their MIS name, i.e. item master records, order
header and detail information, and inventory records.
Next, the preliminary results need to be reviewed by your improvement team. This
stage can take a couple of weeks. The first step is to review findings related to
previously identified opportunities followed by selecting and evaluating new
improvement areas. Overall, the profiling process should take about three to four
weeks to determine reasonably good opportunities.
Profiling is a Great Tool If
Benefits derived from a profiling project can be significant. The payback can also
come quickly; however, watch out for three pitfalls. First, many companies find
that ideas that were being considered before the analysis are no longer viable based
on analysis of the data. More often than not, the real opportunities tend to be
initiatives that were not thought of prior to the start of the project. The lesson here
is to keep your eyes open and your mind prepared for doing something different.
Second, a word of caution about spending too much time on the analysis and
getting mired in the data. A picture is worth a thousand words but too many
pictures and numbers may prevent you from seeing the forest because of the trees.
It is important to have a clear understanding of your major warehouse goals and to
decide on the data diagnostic set that will provide insight into your objectives.