Thursday 14 April 2011

10 tips for selecting a voice picking vendor

Voice Picking is one of the most scalable order fulfilment solutions on the market and can be configured for virtually any application in your distribution centre.

Below are 10 useful tips to consider when selecting a Voice Picking vendor.

1. Analyse your needs. Voice Picking is best used for applications with large number of SKUs located throughout the distribution centre, that require few reaches per unit of travel
2. Ensure your Voice Picking vendor understands warehouse and distribution centre operations. Your potential vendors need to be familiar with these types of operations, not just the hardware and/or software they’re offering. Be sure they know what your associates do on a daily basis and understand the efficiencies you are trying to create.
3. Don’t buy more than you need. No vendor should require that you change your current shipping, receiving, and warehousing processes. Don’t make these alterations unless they improve operational efficiency and productivity.
4. Explain the uniqueness of your warehouse operation. Not all picking, packing, and receiving operations are the same, so the vendor must be able to accommodate your warehouse or distribution centre. For example, is your warehouse climate-controlled? Are items shelved, containerized, or palletized? Do you provide cross-docking services, and will the Voice Picking equipment work in these areas? The vendor needs to consider these factors when planning your solution.
5. Take stock of mobile computing devices. If you are happy with your current hardware, ask if the vendor will allow you to keep and utilize it. Be sure you can still leverage your existing vendor relationships.
6. Consider the ease of integration with existing systems. How well the Voice Picking solution will integrate with your warehouse control system, warehouse management system, and other solutions? What if one of those systems changes? Make sure you can easily integrate systems now and in the future and are not limited by custom integration software.
7. Ask for references. As with any service provider, find out how the vendor treats its customers and handles problems.
8. Investigate the company’s financial stability. Make sure the vendor will be able to meet your warehouse needs now as well as in the future. Ask about profitability, current and prospective customers, future plans, and customer service.
9. Look for excellent voice-recognition technology. Choose a vendor that offers high-quality solutions, and make sure the technology can filter out background noise. The voice engine must be able to “hear” and distinguish the speaker’s voice over all other noise.
10. Don’t let language become a hurdle. You can select speaker-dependent solutions and get core vocabularies in a variety of languages. If your workers comprise multiple ethnicity and speak several languages, make sure the Voice Picking solution will understand what they say.

By Lloyed Lobo, director of business development, AL Systems
April 13, 2011

Friday 8 April 2011

Pick By Voice system

Pick by voice offers conventional order picking methods such as paper lists  or wireless terminals. Instead of communicating visually through paper or computer monitors, pick by voice relies on voice instructions through headphones and a microphone

By freeing the operator’s hands to handle the stock items, pick by voice ensures an ergonomic and efficient pick sequences. Thus the order picker can focus entirely on retrieving the required items
No  more manual keying of data or time-consuming scanning of stock locations. Instead, the instructions to and responses from the picker are entirely by voice. Delays caused by the picker having to stop retrieving items in order to enter data into a device are a thing of the past. The operation is streamlined and productivity increases.

Pick by Voice

A voice application does not stand on its own. A voice application needs to interface with anoth­er system that feeds it the order information. This system can be a WMS, an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, or another application that creates a pick list and transmits it to the voice system.
The main advantage is the real-time response of the voice inter­face to the WMS. Thus, while picking, the picker can immediately feedback ‘out of stock’, a replenishment operator can get the task to restock the location and the picker is able to return to have his order completed