Your WMS may support dynamic slotting, or if not your IT resource may be able to develop this capability. When an order is released that includes a slow moving SKU without a dedicated pick face, a temporary pick slot is created by the WMS, and that slot filled with product from reserve storage to meet that need (alternatively, some companies may even pick slow movers direct from reserve).
Some companies find that automating slow moving SKU slotting management can pay off.
For example, slow moving inventory is placed into an automated storage system that creates high density/efficient product storage without a dedicated pick face for each slow moving SKU. When a pick of one of those SKUs is required, the storage system “serves up” the SKU to a pick face. When order fulfillment is complete the automated storage system places that SKU back into high density storage.
This is simply an automated form of the dynamic slotting approach mentioned above.
Some companies may also choose to use carousels to handle slow movers. It is noteworthy that carousels are used extensively in service parts distribution – an environment often characterized by huge numbers of mostly slow moving SKUs.
Coty Inc., the world’s largest fragrance company, found that while its 900 slowest moving SKUs amounted to only about 2 percent of total volume, they led to substantial bottlenecks in order processing.
Coty deployed two 65 foot long, five-shelf, light-directed horizontal carousels, which led to much more effective picking operations and storage density for those slow movers.
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