Can robots help with Peak?
This year’s peak season promises additional challenges in recruitment.
This year may prove to be the tipping point for warehouse robotics that compensate for the shrinking labour pool by enabling the transition from time-intensive person-to-goods picking to productivity-enhancing goods-to-person picking.
The philosophy is simple. Instead of having pickers travel up and down aisles pulling products, store the products in a way that allows them to be presented to stationary pickers who focus exclusively on assembling orders.
This approach, which has gained significant momentum in the last three years, is enabled by compact, modular robot-based systems, such as AutoStore and CarryPick. They are said to make better use of human resources, allowing more orders to be pulled with fewer people, and dramatically reduce picking times to help meet customer demands for faster delivery.
It’s become clear that fulfillment centres must reduce their dependence on human labour to continue to grow and meet changing customer expectations. Robotic goods-to-person automation systems provide a viable solution to do exactly that. The technology is mature, scalable and cost effective.
See the white paper, Using Automation to Manage Growth in E-commerce Fulfillment, among other here.




