Tuesday, November 8, 2011

What is Really In Your Order? Have you profiled (checked) your orders today?

Your part of the supply chain faces a market place that is full of changes. Changes brought by Economic down-sizing, demographic profiles and a huge growth of new items.

If you have not taken a close look at your orders, you are incurring avoidable distribution costs due to incorrect layout, in correct picking methods and incorrect slotting.  It is like driving a car that is badly tuned.  Don’t throw it away, fix it. You can do the same for your warehouse. 

You may have the same SKU’s in several distribution centers. But what the customer buys and how the customer buys will be different in different DC’s.

Here are some important topics to consider

  • ·                 Who is your customer?     
  •             Are there different types or groups of customers buying products from your facility?
  • ·                 How does the customer place the order? We are referring to the size of the order?
  •             We usually call this ‘Lines per Order”

·         There are so many other issues involved but these are the most important right now.

1.0 Lines per order – how do you calculate this?

 At Karma Logistics, the client company is asked to share 4 individual sets of 1-week worth of data. This is the ‘order-pick’ level data. 

It is simply – on a certain date, by unique invoice, which customer ordered how many lines of orders. 

Unless strong  seasonality is involved, we never ask for 1 year’s worth or last year’s data. 


The same weekly picking data is later used to simulate actual order picking.

We have inserted below a recent order-pick file. 

 
The first customer, shown in blue, has ordered 9 lines and 11 pieces. 

If the same customer had placed 2 different orders in the same day, we should not combine them. We should keep them separate, since, we picked them separately, perhaps one in the morning and one in the afternoon.











2.0 Graph – Lines per Order chart


Then we prepare a cumulative percentile graph.  Like the one above. Often it resembles the common ABC graph. From the data behind this graph, we conclude that about 80% of the orders contain 7 or less number of Lines per order.  We use this number 7 in the discussion below.

3.0 How do we slot the products based on the Lines Per Order.
 In the chart above, we show the Lines-per-order (LPO) in the range of 1 to 45.

3.1 Lines-per-order equals 1 or 2

Such orders are most common in the TV-based selling like in Home Shopping Network and others. In a matter of 20 minutes, you may get as many as 6000 orders. The best way to slot and pick these items is called ‘consolidated pick’. We try to pick the entire 6000 or smaller bunches of this order in bulk, bring them to the packaging station, apply shipping labels to those 6000 orders all asking for the same sku. The corresponding slots for such products may consist of both bulk slots and some small shelving also. Since this particular item is on the catalog, customers may order this item later on also, after the TV promotion is over.

3.2 Lines-per-order is 3 to 6

Many non-food, general merchandise, electrical, parts DC, usually have LPO in this range. We recommend ‘velocity based layout’ for these types of orders. Yes, velocity based, but use some staggering technique to avoid congestion.

3.3 Lines-per-order is 7 to 15

This is the grey area between velocity slotting and family based slotting. If an end-customer receives a shipment of 15 sku’s, how difficult it may be for the customer to sort the items, check against the packing slip and authorize the invoice for payment. If the items are generally in the same product sector, you can go with velocity slotting. But if the products represent a wide range of families and sizes, family slotting may be better. But this is a toss-up.

3.4 Lines-per-order is 16 and higher.

If you promise good customer service from your warehouse, you must slot based only on Family.  Grocery warehouses often have 200 lines per order or more.

4.0 Does your warehouse ship to different Customer Types? 

For example, Churches and restaurants order differently. Wal-Mart orders in a different pattern from an ordinary drugstore chain.

If your customer types vary, you should consider looking at the SKU’s that each customer-type orders. .  Consider groups of customers rather than individual accounts.

Do they, by chance order unique sku’ on part of their order?

The best example is Heinz Tomato ketchup. What is inside the bottle is the same product. But various package sizes are created for different customer types.
Warehouse3DView - a Proprietary Karma Logistics software tool
 In the 3D-drawing above, we show some ideas to take advantage of identifying the customer-types in your business and slotting the products accordingly. When you are picking SKU’s unique to Customer Type A, you should not be forced to walk across sku’s belong to Customer Type B.

If these customer-types share many common sku’s, slot them in a separate zone.

5.0 Profiling your DC – the “Karma” way

The chart below attempts to illustrate the long list of variables that will determine your BEST CASE combination of “Layout Design – Product Slotting – Picking Methodology”


6.0 So far the ‘theory”.  How do you make it happen?

We hope that your DC is in such fine shape that none of the 8 symptoms shown in the graphic below occur in your DC.

We have never walked into a DC that works just like the principles that we propose in PowerPoint presentations. Reality is a different animal.

The warehouse is usually at 120% of capacity; the trucks unloaded during the day shift are either in the dock or located in the middle of the aisle. We expect Forklift operators to do miracles. And they do. They will put more 2 different sku’s in the slot and hope the night shift Order-picker will understand.

And the list goes on. See the graphic.


7.0 Reality – Do lots of house cleaning. Get rid of junk. Get some ‘breathing space’

 
8.0  “Tune” your process

We may have lots of slots. But they don’t work anymore. We may have the wrong number of the right slot openings.  The graph below is for a pallet racking type warehouse. But you can stretch the discussion to other types of storage systems as well. The easiest thing to do, without asking for a major capital budget is to ‘adjust the cross beams’ or ‘buy some cross-beams.

 
9.0 The picture below is worth a thousand reports




Using the same Order-Pick data that we used to compute Lines-per-Order, we compute the HITS for each slot. We define Hits as the number of times you visit a slot. We don’t look at how many ‘pieces’ were picked at a slot.

10.0 Don’t let your warehouse start ‘rotting’ again.

Having taken the time to ‘tune-up’ your warehouse, we ask you to keep it at top running conditions. This is where we provide an automatic weekly tune-up service. With your permission, we connect to your database, once every week, analyze the slotting group criteria established, look for items that are no longer slotted right and we tell you where to ‘move’ them. Plus, we will only tell you those items to move, that will return the best value for you. We do this by doing a ‘before-and-after’ simulation and computing our unique ‘penalty costs’



11.0 We do all this for just 1 reason; To cut down the travel time.


If you want us to fine-tune your facility, you can contact us at the address below.

12.0 You-Tube video that describes our unique way to tune-up your warehouse

 Click on the Black arrow in the middle
Turn the sound ON in your PC


Contact:

ram.krishnan@karma-logistics-inc.com   Senior Consultant at Karma Logistics Inc

Linkedin Bio at:



Tuesday, September 6, 2011

You should slot-number to the lowest pickable face

Use Zone-Aisle-Bay-Level-face.

Slot-numbers should follow certain principles?

Imagine the town where you live in the US, has no scheme in how the roads and avenues are numbered. House numbers do not have a odd-even scheme. Imagine how long will it take for the postman to deliver the mail. If your house is on fire, how long it will take for the fire engine to get there.

Warehouse slot numbers must be simple, make sense for product putaway, product let down and order picking.

A simple common scheme is Zone-Aisle-Bay-Level-Face (Depth)


Zone stands for a section of the facility. This may be a building.

Aisle stands for the aisle surrounded by two sides of shelving.

Bay is the slot location in the aisle.

Level is the slot levels, from ground to ceiling, usually 1 for the ground level, 2 for the next level etc.

Face (position) is the number of positions on a given level. Many facilities fail to clearly define the FACE, making the order picker to guess which item is being ordered.

Depth is an optional field. In 95% of the Pallet Rack DC’s, we can ignore this field, since it is always 1. In a bulk storage DC attached a manufacturing site, Depth field is required. In such a DC, products may be stored on pallets that may be 9 deep or more.

Do not use Special characters like +*& etc in the Slot numbers

Other than the Zone field, try to use Numbers for the aisle, bay, level, face fields, instead of alphabets.

It is easier to understand the logic and pattern with Numbers.  
Different types of slot numbering scheme – Straight Pick, Cross Pick, Z pick,  U-Pick.

Straight Pick



Cross Pick

Zee Pick
U- Pick
Most common – cross pick without snaking.

Z and U pick is for DC’s where the Lines per order is a high number – 200 to 400. Both Z and U picks are designed to reduce the amount of cross travel within the aisle. [from one side of the aisle to the other side]

Pretend that you are racking from one wall to the other wall

In case, you decide to add an extra bay at the 2 ends, you will not be forced to renumber all the bays.

Numbering tunnel bays

Assign 1 or 2 Bay numbers to describe the tunnel bays. 

Snaking vs no snaking

In some DC’s, if you believe in forcing the pick to follow a given pattern, you can use ‘snaking’ in the numbers. This is often done to avoid 2 way traffic in an aisle.  If you are picking to a conveyor, then you will need to follow the prescribed direction.

If you do not need snaking in the aisles, then you will always start numbering the bays with 01, 02 at the beginning of every aisle. 

Level and Face numbering – some examples

Shown above are few examples rack shelving. Each Level and Face must be uniquely numbered.

Note: this is the 5th in a series of Blogs. If you missed the earlier ones, they are saved in the Blog website.

Each of these BLOG content is fresh, not copy/pasted from somewhere. They are based on both past experience and current industry developments. Your comments are most welcome.

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