Awana Clubs uses voice picking to reduce errors and speed returns and replenishment.
Order errors were having a direct impact on Awana Clubs International's bottom-line performance. Its error rate averaged 9%
and climbed as high 40% during its
busy season providing youth and children's ministry programs and materials to more than 12,000 churches in the
United States.
Awana's (www.awana.org) 82,000sq.-ft. distribution center in Schaumburg, Ill., ships directly to registered
churches and stocks 2,400 items ranging from books and pamphlets to
games, trophies, apparel, and small
novelty items such as pens, pins, stickers and bookmarks. The DC handles
more than 160,000 orders per year,
with an average of nine-plus items per order. It averages
20 items per order
during its peak season from August to
October. To better serve customers
and improve efficiency the non-profit
organization has implemented voice
technology throughout the DC.
Seven years ago, it took Awana 11
days
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to ship an order. "We started making a lot of changes to meet the goal of
‘out the door in 24 [hours],'" explains
Steve Hale, director of distribution.
The company added a second shift
and hired temporary workers during
its busy season. These changes cut shipping time to one day for 99% of orders,
but created new problems. "When we
brought in temps there were tons of errors," Hale says.
Following its paper-based process, products were picked and sent to packing stations where 70% of orders were
audited. During the busy months only
50% were checked before shipping. As
a result, many orders were shipped
with errors at an estimated $13 cost
per error.
The problem was alleviated with
the implementation of voice-picking
technology from Lucas Systems
(Sewickley, Pa., www.lucasware.com).
Awana chose to use the voice system
from Lucas, named "Jennifer," because of its lower cost, the promise for
a faster return on investment, and
easy acceptance by employees. Installed in 2004, use of the system expanded incrementally in 2005 and
2006. Awana now uses voice technology to support receiving, replenishment and returns processing.
Flawless implementation
The implementation process was
lead by a team of Lucas engineers and
Awana staff. Lucas took the lead by
asking questions, setting parameters
and determining what needed to be
accomplished before the system was
deployed. The information collected was used to create an engineering study that guided the implementation of the voice-directed
picking system.
Lucas customized the technology
to fit Awana's order fulfillment
processes and requirements. Included were new label printing, short
filling and quality control capabilities.
Hale says he was pleased that the Lucas engineers did not propose any
changes to his operations unless the
change could improve processes already in place.
"The implementation was flawless.
The key is to manage the project
closely and keep an eye on the milestones. You must have someone on
your side that knows your system inside and out. You can't just expect the
vendor to do it all," Hale says.
The voice system tells order pickers
which items and what quantities to
pick. Pickers verbally confirm (using a
three-digit check string printed on
the item location) the quantities and
items as they are placed in the appropriate tote for each order. According
to Hale, verbal confirmation plays a
big part in improving accuracy—incorrect counts used to be his number
one cause of errors. Pickers also tell
the system if a slot is empty. The system immediately relays that information to managers and employees at a
short filling area.
Besides voice picking capabilities,
Lucas also helped install quality control functions using bar code scanning at the packing stations. From a
maximum of 70% order accuracy before voice technology, Awana is now
checking every order that ships. "Our
order accuracy out the door is virtually 100%," Hale says.
Accuracy and productivity gains resulting from the voice technology exceeded expectations. "Jennifer paid
for itself in less than 13 months, and
we didn't even capture the full cost
benefits of fewer errors."
Beyond order picking
In 2005 Awana started rolling out
the voice-directed technology in other
areas. "While accuracy was the main
goal of the picking application, productivity was the big driver for adding voice in returns, receiving and replenishment," Hale says.
The voice technology replaced
manual, paper-based processes that
were inefficient and error-prone. Previously, for example, employees in
the returns area would manually look
up customer and product codes and
tag each returned item with the appropriate location. With the voice
technology, they say the customer or
invoice number, and the item number, and the system instructs them to
place the item in a numbered tote.
Other employees use the same
technology to return the items to
stock. These employees say the tote
number out loud, and the system directs the employee to the first replenishment location. The employee confirms the location and quantity
before he or she moves on to the next
item in the tote. Similar to picking,
verbal confirmation on put-away ensures that the right items are put in
the right locations.
Results
"Before Jennifer we had an internal
error rate in picking of 9%, and with
temps it was more like 35% to 40%,"
Hale says. Using voice technology in
picking and quality control, errors
were reduced 80% and order accuracy out the door is approaching
100%. "Although productivity wasn't
our driving factor, it went up significantly. We were expecting a 15% productivity increase, but now we are at a
35% improvement. Our average picking productivity was 113 lines per
hour per employee. It's now up
around 195 to 200 lines per hour, and
we've had four employees who have
joined the 300 club, picking at the
rate of 300 lines per hour for a full
shift."
Awana is currently compiling detailed metrics on the returns, replenishment, and receiving functions. In
addition to improved productivity,
Hale says that better accuracy in replenishment and returns have directly
impacted picking accuracy, reducing
re-work at the quality control and packing stations.
In addition, the voice technology reduced training time to about two
hours, which is important during peak season when the company hires many
temporary workers, primarily high
school and college students. "Some
people are ready to go five minutes after training the system. And most of
them say it is so much fun working
this way," Hale adds.
Voice technology from Lucas
Systems enabled Awana Clubs to
improve its picking accuracy to
almost 100% and increase its
productivity by 35%.
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