Title: An Introduction to Warehousing
1An Introduction to Warehousing
2Readings on Storage and Material Handling
Equipment employed in Modern Production and
Warehousing Facilities
- Tompkins, White, Bozer, Frazelle, Tanchoco and
Trevino, Facilities Planning, John Wiley,
Chapters 6 and 9. - The site of College-Industry council on material
handling education http//www.mhia.org/et/mhe_tax
.htm
3The role of warehousing in contemporary
distribution networks
- Buffer It holds inventory for downstream stages
of the supply chain, in order to allow the entire
production / distribution network to deal
efficiently with the systematic and random
variation in the network operations, or to
exploit significant economies of scale. - Typical sources/examples of systematic variation
- product seasonalities (e.g., Toys R Us, CVS
merchandise) - cyclical / batched production due to large set-up
costs - Typical sources of random variation
- variations in transportation times due to
weather, traffic congestion, bereaucracy, etc. - variations in production times due to unreliable
operations, unreliable suppliers - Typical economies of scale involved
- Price breaks in bulk purchasing
4The role of warehousing in contemporary
distribution networks (cont.)
- Consolidation center It accumulates and
consolidates products from various points of
manufacture within a single firm, or several
firms, for combined shipment to common customers.
- Consolidation allows to control the overheads of
transportation operations by - allowing the operation of the carriers to their
capacity, and therefore, the more effective
amortizing of the fixed transportation costs - reducing the number of shipping and receiving
operations - Cross-docking Consolidation without staging
5The role of consolidation in contemporary
distribution networks
Retailers
Manufacturers
Manufacturers
Retailers
Consolidator
6The role of warehousing in contemporary
distribution networks (cont.)
- Value-Added-Processing (VAP) Increasingly,
warehouses are required to undertake some
value-added-processing tasks like - pricing and labeling
- kitting (i.e., repackaging items to form a new
item e.g., beauty products) - light final assembly (e.g., assembly of a
computer unit from its constituent components,
delivered by different suppliers) - invoicing
- In general, this development is aligned to and
suggested by the idea/policy of postponement of
product differentiation, which allows for
customized product configuration, while
maintaining a small number of generic product
components.
7A schematic representation of the warehouse
material flow
Replenishment
Replenishment
Reserve Storage and Pallet Picking
Case Picking
Broken Case Picking
Accumulation, Sortation Packing
Direct putaway to reserve
Direct putaway to primary
Receiving
Shipping
Cross-docking
8The major warehouse operations
- Inbound processes
- Receiving (10 of warehouse operating costs)
the collection of activities involved in - the orderly receipt of all materials coming into
the warehouse - providing the assurance that the quantity and
quality of such materials are as ordered - disbursing materials to storage or to other
organizational functions requiring them. - Put-away (15 of warehouse operating costs) the
act of placing merchandise to storage it
includes - determining and registering the actual storage
location(s) - transportation
- placement
9The major warehouse operations (cont.)
- Outbound processes
- Processing customer orders (typically done by the
computerized warehouse management system of the
facility) This set of activities includes - checking that the requested material is available
to ship - if necessary, coordinating order fulfillment with
other facilities of the distribution network - producing the pick lists to guide the order
picking and the necessary shipping documentation - scheduling the order picking and the shipping
activity. - Order-picking (55 of warehouse operating
costs) the set of physical activities involved
in collecting from the storage area the materials
necessary for the fulfillment of the various
customer orders, typically identified as - traveling (55 of the order picking time)
- searching (15 of the order picking time)
- extracting (10 of the order picking time)
- documentation and other activities (20 of the
order picking time)
10The major warehouse operations (cont.)
- Outbound processes (cont.)
- Checking Checking orders for completeness (and
quality of product) - Packing Packaging the merchandise in appropriate
shipping containers, and attaching the necessary
documentation / labels. - Shipping The activities of
- preparing the shipping documents (packing list,
address label, bill of lading) - accumulating orders to outbound carrier
- loading trucks (although, in many instances, this
may be the carriers responsibility). - Others Handling returns, and performing the
additional value-added-processing supported by
contemporary warehouses, as discussed in a
previous slide.
11Operational Cost Breakdown
10
20
15
55
12Some facility design problems particular to
Warehousing facilities
- Allocation of a storage medium to various SKUs
- Design of the forward area Given a certain
storage size, which SKUs to include in it and at
what quantities? - Design of a cross-docking facility
13SKU Storage Policies and Location Assignment
14Storage Policies
- Main Issue Decide how to allocate the various
storage locations of a uniform storage medium to
a number of SKUs.
15Types of Storage Policies
- Dedicated storage Every SKU i gets a number of
storage locations, N_i, exclusively allocated to
it. The number of storage locations allocated to
it, N_i, reflects its maximum storage needs and
it must be determined through inventory activity
profiling. - Randomized storage Each unit from any SKU can by
stored in any available location - Class-based storage SKUs are grouped into
classes. Each class is assigned a dedicated
storage area, but SKUs within a class are stored
according to randomized storage logic.
16Location Assignment under dedicated storage
- Major Criterion driving the decision-making
process Enhance the throughput of your storage
and retrieval operations by reducing the travel
time ltgt reducing the travel distance - How? By allocating the most active units to the
most convenient locations...
17Convenient Locations
- Locations with the smallest distance d_j to the
I/O point! - In case that the material transfer is performed
through a forklift truck (or a similar type of
material handling equipment), a proper distance
metric is the, so-called, rectilinear or
Manhattan metric (or L1 norm) d_j
x(j)-x(I/O) y(j)-y(I/O) - For an AS/RS type of storage mode, where the S/R
unit can move simultaneously in both axes, with
uniform speed, the most appropriate distance
metric is the, so-called Tchebychev metric (or L?
norm)
- d_j max (x(j)-x(I/O),y(j)-y(I/O))
18Active SKUs
- SKUs that cause a lot of traffic!
- In steady state, the appropriate activity
measure for a given SKU i - Average visits per storage location
- (number of units handled per unit of time) /
- (number of allocated storage locations)
- TH_i / N_i
19A fast solution algorithm
- Rank all the available storage locations in
increasing distance from the I/O point, d_j. - Rank all SKUs in decreasing turns, TH_i/N_i.
- Move down the two lists, assigning to the next
most highly ranked SKU i, the next N_i locations.
20Example
A 20/102
B 15/5 3
C 10/2 5
D 20/5 4
A
A
A
A
A
B
B
A
D
D
D
A
B
A
B
A
C
C
D
D
A
B
21Location Assignment under class-based storage
- Consider that classes are established in such a
way that SKUs with comparable ratios of TH_i/N_i
belong to the same class. - Furthermore, with every class c associate two
quantities - N_c aS_i N_i where a ? (0,1)
- TH_c S_i TH_i
- Then, the logic developed for the location
assignment under dedicated storage applies
immediately when replacing the set of SKUs i by
the set of classes c.
22Design of the fast-pick area
23The fast-pick or forward-pick or
primary-pick area
Primary picking
Restocking
Shipping
Receiving
Forward pick Area
Reserves picking
Reserves Area
24The major trade-offs behind the establishment of
a forward pick area
- A forward pick area increases the pick density by
concentrating a large number of SKUs within a
small physical space. - On the other hand, it introduces the activity of
restocking. - Also, in general, a forward pick area concerns
the picking of smaller quantities and involves
more sophisticated equipment than the picking
activity taking place in the reserves area. So,
its deployment requires some capital investment
in equipment and (extra) space.
25Selecting the SKUs to be accommodated in the
fast-pick area and the corresponding volumes
- We need to quantify the net benefit of having
the SKU in the fast-pick area vs. doing all the
picking from the reserve. - This is done as follows Let
- V Volume of entire forward-pick storage area
(e.g., in cubic ft) - f_i Flow of SKU i, (e.g., in cubic ft / year)
- c_r cost of each restock trip (/trip)
- s the saving realized when a pick is done from
the forward area rather than the reserve
(/pick) - p_i the expected annual picks for SKU i
(picks/year) - u_i storage volume to be allocated to SKU i,
i1,,n (cubic ft) - Then, the net annual benefit of allocating
fast-pick storage u_i to SKU i, is - c_i(u_i)
0 if u_i 0
(/year)
sp_i - c_r(f_i / u_i) if u_i gt 0
26Plotting the net benefit function
c_i(u_i)
(c_rf_i) / (sp_i) minimum volume to be
stored, if any
u_i
27Problem Formulation
- max ?_i c_i(u_i)
- s.t.
- ?_i u_i ? V
- u_i ?? 0, ? i
- A near-optimality condition
- The SKUs that have the strongest claim to the
fast-pick area are those with the greatest
viscocities, p_i / ? f_i. - The optimal allocation of the total volume V to
any given SKU set 1,k, to enter the fast-pick
area, is according to the following formula - ? i?1,k, u_i (? f_i / ?_j ? f_j) V
28Algorithm for computing a near-optimal solution
- Sort all SKUs from most viscous to least (p_i /
? f_i) - For k 0 to n (total number of SKUs)
- Compute the optimal allocation of the fast-pick
storage if it accommodates only the first k SKUs
of the ordering obtained in Step 1. - Evaluate the corresponding total net benefit.
- Pick the value of k that provides the largest
total net benefit.
29Crossdocking
30Literature and interesting Web sites
- Lecture material
- Bartholdi Hackman, Chpt. 11
- Kevin Gue, Crossdocking Just-In-Time for
Distribution, Tech. Report, Graduate School of
Business Public Policy, Naval Postgraduate
School, Monterey, CA, May 2001 - J. Bartholdi and K. Gue, The Best Shape for a
Crossdock, working paper - K. Gue, The Effects of Trailer Scheduling on the
Layout of Freight Terminals, Transportation
Science, 334, pg. 419-428, November, 1999. - An interesting site
- http//web.nps.navy.mil/krgue/Crossdocking/crossd
ocking.html
31The driving idea behind crossdocking
- Crossdocking seeks to eliminate the expensive
functions of inventory holding and order picking
from modern distribution centers by taking
advantage of the information system
infrastructure in modern supply chains. - Hence, at a crossdock, incoming material is
already assigned to a destination, and therefore,
the only required functions are consolidation and
shipping. - In this way, material is staged at the facility
for less than 24 hours. - gt Just-In-Time for distribution
32Major requirements for justifying and
effectively deploying a crossdock operation
- Significant and steady product flow
- easy to handle material / unit-loads
- Good and reliable information flow across the
entire supply chain - pre-distribution crossdocking the customer is
assigned before the shipment leaves the vendor,
so it arrives to the crossdock bagged and tagged
for transfer. - post-distribution crossdocking the crossdock
itself allocates material to its stores.
33Examples
- Home Depot operates a pre-distribution crossdock
in Philadelphia serving more than 100 stores in
the Northeast area. - Wal-Mart uses
- traditional warehousing for staple stock - i.e.,
items that customers are expected to find in the
same place in every Wal-Mart (e.g., toothpaste,
shampoo, etc.) - crossdocking for direct ship - i.e., items that
Wal-Mart buyers have gotten a great deal on and
are pushing out to the stores - Costco uses pallet-based post-distribution
crossdocking - Computer firms like Dell consolidate the major
computer components in merge in transit
centers. - JIT manufacturers consolidate inbound supplies in
a nearby warehouse - LTL and package carriers (UPS, FedEx) crossdock
to consolidate freight
34Crossdock Operations
Strip doors doors where full trailers are parked
and unloaded. Any incoming trailer can be
unloaded to any strip door.
Stack doors doors where empty trailers are put
to collect freight for specific destinations.
Each stack door is permanently assigned to a
distinct destination.
- Typical material handling modes
- manual carts for smaller items
- pallet jacks and forklifts for pallet loads
- cart draglines (reduce walking time but impede
forklift travel)
35Optimizing the crossdock performance
- The major operational cost for crossdock is the
labor cost. - Hence, the system performance is optimized by
seeking to maximize the throughput of the
crossdock operations by establishing an efficient
freight flow. - Factors affecting the freight flow
- Long term decisions
- Number of doors and shape of the building
- Employed material handling systems
- parking facilities
- Medium term decisions
- Crossdock layout, i.e., the characterization of
the various doors as strip or stack doors, and
the assignment of specific destinations to the
stack doors - Short term decisions
- Inbound Trailer Scheduling
36The number of doors and the parking lot size
- Number of stack doors determined by the volume
of freight moved to each customer, and any
potential delivery schedules - Number of strip doors since trailer unloading is
a faster job than trailer loading, a common rule
of thumb is to have twice as many stack doors as
strip doors, so that you balance the incoming
with the outgoing flow. - In general the larger the number of doors in the
crossdock, the larger the distances that must be
traveled. - The parking lot should provide parking space for
two trailers per door, so any flow surges can be
accommodated without considerable problems.
37The shape of the crossdock building
- Corners are bad! Specifically
- Internal corners take away door locations (about
8 doors per corner) - External corners take away storage space in
front of the door (w/2 doors worth of
floor space) - On the other hand, a building shape that
minimizes its corners increases - the travel distances
- the traffic congestion in front of the most
centrally located (and therefore, - the best) doors
- Some characterizations of the crossdock building
shapes - diameter max door-to-door distance
- centrality the rate of growth of the diameter
for a symmetric - expansion of the building by one door at each
end of it. - Suggested building shapes
- I for small crossdocks (up to 150 doors)
- T for medium size crossdocks (between 150-250
doors) - H for the largest crossdocks (above 250 doors)
- Frequently, the building shape is determined by
other constraints, e.g., - available land, an existing building, etc.
38Crossdock layout
- In general, centrally located doors should be
reserved for the uloading activity and for
destination with large outgoing flows. - On the other hand, if the freight on each inbound
trailer is destined to a small and stable set of
customers, then the facility can be decongested
by establishing distinct hubs serving clusters of
destinations that tend to have their freight on
the same incoming trailers. - Two extensively used heuristics are
- the block heuristic Assign first the unloading
activity to the best doors (i.e. the doors having
the smallest average distances to all other
doors). Subsequently, assign the remaining doors
to outbound destinations, prioritizing them in
decreasing order of their flow intensities - the alternating heuristic The door assignment
alternates between a strip door and a stack door
to the destination with the next highest flow - gt The alternating heuristic produces solutions
that are typically 10 better than the solutions
produced by the block heuristic.
39Trailer Scheduling
- How should we pick the next inbound trailer to be
processed at a free strip door? - If the freight mix tends to be uniform across all
inbound trailers, then a simple rule like FIFO
will perform well. - Otherwise, the selected trailer should be the one
that will have the smallest processing time
w.r.t. the considered strip door, among those
currently waiting in the parking lot.