In order to have a 360o view of
business investments in Warehouse Management, it is essential to develop a Key
Performance Indicators (KPI) for effective business decision. Before we
continue, let us understanding some terms;
Key performance indicator (KPI) is a measure of
performance of the business in order to benchmark against the competition and
explore the possibility to improve in order to gain competitive
advantage. Warehousing function is a very critical within any supply
chain. If the products do not move seamlessly within supply chain
business would face serious service related challenges. Hence, it is
necessary to drive the performance of the warehouse through key performance
indicators. Further, in a continuous improvement environment, it is
essential to benchmark against the industry standards in order to drive
improvements.
What is Benchmarking?
“Benchmarking is the process of
comparing one’s business processes and performance metrics to industry bests
and/or best practices from other industries.”Benchmarking is essentially a
process to measure a business’s processes against the competition, world
standards or the business itself.
How do we benchmark and why?
The benchmark scope typically
includes productivity, quality, time, and cost. The objective of this activity
is to improve from learning the performance measurement in order to execute
things better, faster, and cheaper. The benchmarking effort is driven by
a desire to evaluate business processes to see if they may be improved. The
resulting improvements should then be related to how those improvements may be
implemented to help a company better meet the requirements of its customers
How to determine
KPIs?
People, Cost, Space
and Systems drive the performance inside the warehouse. Hence, generally
warehouse KPIS are based on the above mentioned drivers and focused on activity
in order micromanage the performance. The following activities are common
in any warehouse:
1.
Receiving;
2.
Put-away;
3.
Storage;
4.
Pick-n-pack;
5.
Shipping
Receiving:
The receiving
activity is fundamental to warehousing function. Unless the merchandise is
properly received, it will be very difficult to handle all other subsequent
functions. The receiving function allows warehouse operators to receive product
against a purchase order, and against an Advanced Shipping Notice (ASN) that
has been received via Electronic Data Interchange (EDI). Receiving process
could include goods physically received at the warehouse and stored or directly
delivered at customer site or cross-docked.
The relevant KPIs for
receiving function should include the following:
1.
Cost – Cost of
Receiving per receiving line;
2.
Productivity – Volume
received per man-hour;
3.
Utilization – Receiving
Dock door utilization %;
4.
Quality – Accurate
receipts %;
5.
Cycle Time – Time
taken to process a receipt.
Put-away:
Once receiving
activity is completed, the accepted merchandize has to be stored in a location
that is convenient to retrieve for further action. This process is called
put-away and this is just reverse of order pick function. We have
different types of put-away processes.
·
Direct Put-away
– Put-away directly to primary or serve locations.
·
Directed Put-away –
Put-away directed by Warehouse Management System.
·
Batched and sequenced
Put-away – Received material sorted and put-away processed in batches to
maximize the efficiency.
·
Interleaving –
Combine put-away and retrieval to avoid empty travel.
The KPIs for this
activity should include the following:
1.
Cost – Cost per
put-away line;
2.
Productivity –
Put-away per man-hour;
3.
Utilization –
Utilization % of labour and equipment;
4.
Quality – Perfect
put-away %;
5.
Cycle Time – Time
taken for each put-away.
Storage:
Broadly we have two
types of storage systems and they are manual storage and the second one is
automated storage and retrieval system (AS/RS). Again within manual
storage, we have six different types of storage and they are:
1.
Block stacking
– “Units loads stacked on top of each other and stored on the floor on
the storage lanes.”
2.
Stacking frames – “are
either frames attached to standard wooden pallets or self-contained units made
up of decks and posts. Stacking frames are portable and enable users to
stack material several loads high.”
3.
Single-deep selective
pallet rack – “is a simple construction of metal uprights and
cross-members providing immediate (pick-face) access to each load stored (that
is, no honey combing).”
4.
Double-deep rack
– “are mostly selective racks that are two pallets position deep.”
5.
Drive-in rack – “extend
the reduction of aisle space begun with double-deep rack by providing storage
lanes from five to ten load deep and three to five loads high.”
6.
Drive-thru rack
– “is merely drive-in rack that is accessible from both sides of the
rack.”
The KPIS for this
activity would include:
1.
Cost – Storage cost
per item;
2.
Productivity –
Inventory per sq. foot;
3.
Utilization – %
Location and cube occupied;
4.
Quality – % Location
without inventory discrepancies;
5.
Cycle Time –
Inventory days on hand.
Pick-n-Pack:
This activity again
can be broadly divided into two parts. First one deal with case picking
and the second one deal with small item picking. Further case picking can
be classified into three categories. The first one is known as Pick-face
palletizing where warehouse operator palletizes at the pick-face as he/she
traverses the picking tour. The second one is downstream palletizing
where cases are picked onto conveyors and sorted at the staging area. The
third one is direct loading where the cases were conveyed directly into the
truck.
Further, the small
item picking can be classified into three categories. The first one is
known as picker-to-stock, where the picker moves around to pick the
cases. The second one is stock-to-picker. In this case stock was
sent to the stationed picker through AS/RS machine. The third one is known as
automated item picking. In this process items are automatically dispensed
into shipping cartons or tote pans.
The relevant KPIs for
this activity would include:
1.
Cost – Cost of
picking per order line;
2.
Productivity – Order
lines picked per hour;
3.
Utilization – Picking
labour and equipment utilization %;
4.
Quality –
Perfect picking lines %;
5.
Cycle Time – Order
Pick cycle time per order.
Shipping:
Shipping is the last
step in warehouse activity in handling shipping goods to the customer or
handling stock transfers. This process is the origin to moving product
from point A to point B.
The KPIs for this
activity could include:
1.
Cost – Cost of
shipping per order;
2.
Productivity – Order
process for shipping per man hour;
3.
Utilization –
Utilization of shipping docks in %;
4.
Quality –
Perfect shipping %;
5.
Cycle Time – Shipping
time (from the time order picked to physically movement of the truck) per
order.
“Continuous improvement
is better than delayed perfection.” Mark Twain
The above are the
broad KPIs identified for each activity inside the warehouse. Warehouse
operations profile could change based on the product handled. For
instance in a FMCG/Retail warehouse the order picking could be manual whereas
in the aerospace industry the order picking is totally automated and AS/RS is
in operation. The volume of labour deployed, cost of operations and
capital equipment deployment largely depends upon the product handled in the warehouse.
Hence, the KPIs are to be customized based on product profile. In my
opinion warehouse is the most happening place in any business and there is huge
potential for improvements in the areas of productivity, cost and avoiding
accidents which could result in operational disruption. Activity based
costing would help monitoring warehouse cost behavior against the budgeted
expenditure. Process mapping and time and motion study will help the
business to improve the productivity. The KPIs should be tangible and
measurable improvements that can be identified and achieved. I strongly
believe that KPI setting is the stepping stone for performance improvement.
That's a really nice quote from Mark Twain. Thanks for this very informative post.
ReplyDeleteThe volume of labour deployed, cost of operations and capital equipment deployment largely depends upon the product handled in the warehouse. Hence, the KPIs are to be customized based on product profile. A warehouse for rent that has above average performance is Safehouse Storage.
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