Speak and you will find June 1st 2007 Distribution centres that implement voice-enabled logistics technology are experiencing
significant benefits, including increases in productivity, high order accuracy, reduced
training time for new workers and improved safety, says Voxware's Richard Hyne
Voice-enabled technology can
enhance a number of distribution
centre tasks, including order
picking, receiving, put-away, loading, cycle
counting, inventory control, returns and
yard management.
The picking task typically accounts for 42
percent of the average distribution centre's
labour costs. Distribution centres therefore
usually gain the most benefit from applying
voice-enabled logistics technology to
picking and usually begin with a picking
implementation.
Productivity
The productivity increases that voice
technology provides vary depending on the
system in use prior to voice
implementation. Increases of 15 percent,
however, are not uncommon.
Somerfield, a UK based Voxware
customer, saw favourable productivity
increases by deployed voice in its
distribution centres. "It's hard to believe
that a 10-20% productivity improvement
can be achieved but we have proved it can,"
says Justin Cash, regional general manager
of Wincanton, a European supply chain
solutions provider that manages about two
thirds of Somerfield's distribution centres.
The greatest increases often happen at
distribution centres that transition from
paper-based picking systems. Distribution
centres that already have a technologybased
picking operation, however, can still
find improvements from implementing
voice technology
For example, consider the worker who
uses a handheld bar code scanner as he
performs picking tasks. He must first view
the screen to learn where to pick the next
product. He travels to the picking location,
picks up the scanner, scans the location ID
bar code, puts down the scanner, grabs the
product, picks up the scanner, presses a key
to indicate that he has completed the pick
and then repeats the cycle. Over the course
of a shift, the worker spends a great deal of
time handling the computer – time he
could use more productively.
Voice-enabled logistics technology
eliminates all that device handling. With
voice, the worker hears the next picking
location through his headset and
immediately begins moving there. When he
arrives, he speaks a location check digit or
product code to confirm that he's at the
correct location and hears the pick quantity.
After he picks the product, he verbally
confirms the quantity he picked and hears
the next picking location, all in an
uninterrupted process. It is this streamlined
process in which the worker's hands and
eyes are free that accounts for much of the
productivity gain that voice-enabled
technology provides.
Accuracy
The built-in confirmations of picking
locations and quantities picked provide
voice technology's order accuracy rates of
up to 99.95 percent. If a worker goes to an
incorrect location and therefore speaks an
incorrect check digit, the voice system
immediately corrects him and if necessary,
provides directions to the correct location.
If a worker picks an incorrect number of
items, the voice system recognises the
mistake immediately when the worker
speaks the number of items he picked. The
voice system then corrects the worker.
Distribution centres that implement voiceenabled
logistics technology often find that
they no longer need separate workers to
check shipments for accuracy before they
leave the centres.
Safety
Taking a mobile computer out of the hands
of a worker also improves safety. A worker
who uses voice-enabled logistics
technology never needs to look away from
his work. This enables him to remain alert
to any of the many hazards that can be
present in a distribution centre
environment. In addition, both of the
worker's hands are always available to
handle product and mechanical equipment.
Worker Training
Voice technology enables distribution
centres to greatly reduce training time for
new workers.
"Our training time has decreased by 50%
as a result of implementing Voxware's voiceenabled
logistics system," says Eddie
Mcgilveray, WMS project manager at Argos.
Voice technology allows distribution
centres to have new workers trained,
deployed and productive in as little as two
hours. A voice-enabled logistics system does
this by providing a virtual supervisor in the
worker's ear. It guides workers through their
tasks, step-by-step, with words spoken by a
human voice in the worker's native language.
If a worker has a question, he can speak it to
the system in his own language or dialect.
The system will understand and respond
with the information the worker needs.
These benefits are particularly important to
distribution centres that experience seasonal
peaks in business, because they allow
temporary workers to become productive
quickly and with little attention from
supervisors. The voice system's continuous
prompting also helps keep less motivated
workers focused on their tasks.
Technology
Recent advances in voice-enabled logistics
software – such as that produced by
Voxware – bring new benefits to
distribution centres, including decreased
costs, shorter implementation times and
onsite adaptability.
Modern voice-enabled logistics software
can run on certified Windows CE mobile
computers with the proper audio and
memory configurations. This reduces the
total cost of ownership by giving users a
wider choice of hardware from a variety of
leading manufacturers. Open software
that's written to industry standards, such as
HTML and VoiceXML, makes this possible. It
also makes possible the integration of voice
with other technologies, such as bar code
scanning and RFID in multi-modal systems.
Component-based, service-oriented
architecture (SOA) software enables voice
solution providers to deliver voice-enabled
logistics systems without custom
programming. These SOA-based software
services and graphical user interface (GUI)
software toolsets are designed to be utilised
by non-programmers, thus eliminating
nearly all of the custom coding efforts and
costly customisation associated with
conventional voice solutions. This offers
greater flexibility in response to changes
inherent in the logistics industry.
Voice-enabled logistics systems offer
proven benefits, including high productivity,
high order accuracy, improved worker safety
and fast worker training. By making use of
current technology such as service-oriented
architecture and other industry standards,
the latest voice logistics software products
provide the additional benefits of speedy
implementation, hardware flexibility and
onsite adaptability, enabling rapid and cost
effective responses to distribution centre
changes. |