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Key Takeaways:
The pandemic has made a lasting impact on warehousing. Before COVID-19, LEAN warehousing was the rule, not the exception. But as consumer spending grew from 2020-2023, supply chains simultaneously experienced a perfect storm of troubles, resulting in many items being backlogged or out of stock entirely. Businesses compensated by putting traditional LEAN practices aside and overstocking.
As we head further into 2024, spending seems to be moderating, despite rising interest rates and lingering inflation. December retail sales in the U.S. rose 5.6% over the previous year, the largest jump since early 2023, but smaller than the prior two years. Likewise, warehouse managers are returning to a “just-in-time” inventory management strategy, departing from the “just-in-case” pandemic-era philosophy.
As companies readjust to this new normal, they find themselves working through several issues:
In this article, we will walk through the ins and outs of LEAN warehouse management. We’ll also cover the benefits of outsourcing to a 3PL vendor, providing flexibility, resilience, with reliable technology and infrastructure in place for real-time visibility.
A brief history of LEAN
LEAN warehouse management optimizes operations with systematic improvements to productivity and efficiency. Its prioritizes reducing lead times, cutting waste, and boosting customer satisfaction. LEAN allows companies to cut costs by streamlining warehouse processes.
After Henry Ford’s assembly line took the production world by storm, Toyota’s Kiichiro Toyoda and Taiichi Ohno applied simple innovations to produce continuity in process flow and wider product variety. Thus, the Toyota Production System (TPS)—the modern predecessor to LEAN—was born, which shifted focus from how individual machines were used to how product flowed from beginning to end.
Toyota achieved low cost, high quality, high variety, and quick throughput times that delivered products adapted to changing customer preferences. This process included right-sizing machines to fit the company’s required volume, ensuring quality with self-monitored machines, putting machines in order of process sequence. Many other innovations achieved new levels of efficiency and customer service.
Ryder’s supply-chain solutions team has been using LEAN business systems for decades to optimize supply-chain, warehousing, and logistics efficiency. Ryder proactively sought Kaizen” initiatives – a Japanese term for continuous improvements – by enhancing such practices as yard-cost savings, customs compliance, and general process enhancements. Toyota recognized Ryder’s contributions to its efficiency by bestowing its Innovation Award at its 2023 Supplier Conference in Grapevine, Tex.
The benefits of LEAN
The U.S. warehousing market, once booming, now sees signs of contraction. Businesses are moving back to a LEAN philosophy, consolidating warehousing operations and upgrading their existing facilities rather than building new ones. At the same time, retailers are recovering from a long inventory drawdown and adjusting supply chains to pre-pandemic levels, reflecting current consumer spending habits.
There are many key benefits of this LEAN warehousing renaissance:
Now that we’ve walked through the benefits of LEAN, let’s address five key principles.
The key principles of LEAN
There are five essential principles foundational to all LEAN practices, including warehousing. Taken together, they enable safe, organized, and efficient warehouse work environment.
Ongoing training and encouragement establishes and maintains these five LEAN principles. Your warehouse managers will be able to confidently apply them, and your staff will feel empowered to achieve the highest possible standard.
Three tips to effectively implement LEAN
New warehouse space remains at a premium. New leasing activity grew by 14.8% in the fourth quarter of 2023, a positive sign even though that was down 9% from the same quarter last year. Below are three techniques to effectively implement LEAN:
The marriage of LEAN and technology
Technology is key to setting up and maintaining a LEAN warehouse. Robotics, automated guided vehicles (AGVs), and warehouse management systems (WMS), help improve efficiency and reduce waste. AGVs and robotics can automate repetitive tasks which leads to fewer errors, and a WMS helps optimize order picking and inventory tracking.
Some of these innovations include:
Consider outsourcing to a 3PL
While you may have the ambition and vision to imagine a future with LEAN warehousing, you may not have time to implement it. Enter a 3PL partner who has the experience and knowledge of best practices to take your vision and do the work of putting it into action.
A 3PL has an extensive LEAN management background, with flexible strategies that adapt to ever-changing customer-spending habits. It also has preexisting real estate and infrastructure to provide an optimized warehouse space that can help lower overhead costs. Finally, a 3PL has advanced technology platforms that can incorporate your existing systems. This allows instant real-time inventory access, allowing more informed decisions.