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Within the four walls of a typical warehouse today reside a host of applications, each designed to manage a wide assortment of tasks. Perhaps the most commonly known among them is the warehouse management system (WMS), which has played a key role in running distribution facilities for decades.
More recently, another application has entered the mix: the warehouse execution system (WES). Not to be confused with its closely related cousins — the WMS, the WCS (warehouse control system), or even the OMS (order management system) — the warehouse execution system was developed to help warehouses respond to an increasingly complex supply chain environment, something other systems haven’t fully been able to achieve on their own. This integrative, AI-enabled tool has the power to automate decisions, orchestrate operations between both humans and machines, adjust to constantly changing circumstances, and manage the overall operational flow of the warehouse.
Seth Patin, chief executive officer of LogistiVIEW, a provider of warehouse execution software, believes the key differentiator between the WES and other warehouse management applications is its ability to make decisions in a deeper and more detailed way. “It’s becoming increasingly difficult to deliver efficiency and meet SLAs [service-level agreements] with all the massive disruption and cost increases that are constantly taking place,” he says. “Warehouse execution goes beyond the what to focus on the who, the when, the where, the why, and the how within a warehouse.”
But what exactly has changed in the warehouse landscape to necessitate this new tool, and how can the WES not only respond to today’s most pressing challenges, but also prepare distributors for the future of warehouse operations?
Download Connecting the Dots: The Role of the Modern-Day Warehouse Execution System to find out more.
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