Inventory management has always been a critical operation, but a number of factors have put even more pressure on manufacturers to do a better job of tracking their inventory in real-time. E-commerce initiatives rely on accurate inventory to increase sales and keep customers coming back to the online store. Customers now demand faster, lower-cost shipping that is only possible through more efficient inventory handling. Customers also check inventory online before placing an order or visiting a physical location to purchase an item. If you can’t show them what’s in stock, they will take their business elsewhere.
Companies are opening more warehouses in order to place inventory closer to customers, and those facilities are often larger, creating a need for faster mobile communications. Warehouses have to manage higher numbers of low-volume SKUs, and are expected to execute on same-day shipping requirements with increasingly tight delivery windows.
Picking and replenishment processes account for as much as 70 percent of operational costs in a typical warehouse, according to a Motorola Solutions warehouse vision report. And they are often rife with inefficiencies.
Enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems can provide some of the visibility required to address these challenges but without real-time data these software systems are working with yesterday’s information. That’s where mobile barcode scanning solutions for the warehouse and distribution play a huge role.
Implementing a real-time data collection solution that uses barcode labeling, mobile computers and scanners, and a wireless LAN can provide a return on investment in less than a year, thanks to productivity gains and error reduction in physical inventories alone, says Brady Stevens, project manager at Global Shop Solutions.
According to Stevens, a higher percentage of clients are now deploying ERP software, barcoding equipment, and solutions like GS Mobile at the same time.
The more education a customer receives about the benefits of mobile barcode scanning and printing, the more likely they are to invest in it.
Brady Stevens, Project Manager at Global Shop Solutions
Most inventory is already barcoded – a recent Zebra Technologies study found that inbound inventory barcoding and the use of barcoding at the pallet or case level has a penetration rate of more than 80 percent. Your competitors are likely already leveraging barcodes in the DC, or plan to do so.
Here are five benefits that will have a direct impact on your bottom line:
Mobile barcode solutions can enhance an ERP deployment by providing high levels of inventory visibility and control. As customers demand faster and more accurate service, along with real-time order status information, barcoding has evolved from an internally-focused way to improve efficiency, to a valuable competitive necessity.
Check out the landing page for Global Shop Solutions customers, where you can see several examples of products that are certified to work with your Global Shop Solutions ERP application and you can learn more about the ways EMS can help you optimize your barcode scanning and printer investment and make the best use of the one limited resource we all need to optimize, which is time.
Eric Sutter is a business development professional with more than 20 years of experience in barcoding, building solutions for asset tracking and warehouse management across a wide range of vertical markets. Sutter founded EMS Barcode Solutions on the premise that customers need more than data collection devices and software— they need solutions. By combining and integrating components such as mobile computers, software, labels, and ribbons with professional services, EMS delivers solutions that provide its customers with a tangible return on their investments.