When a new line of business caused backups at Koch Entertainment's packing stations, an automated packaging system cleared the logjam. Now the music and film distributor is shipping a lot more orders in much less time.
Contributing Editor Toby Gooley is a writer and editor specializing in supply chain, logistics, and material handling, and a lecturer at MIT's Center for Transportation & Logistics. She previously was Senior Editor at DC VELOCITY and Editor of DCV's sister publication, CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly. Prior to joining AGiLE Business Media in 2007, she spent 20 years at Logistics Management magazine as Managing Editor and Senior Editor covering international trade and transportation. Prior to that she was an export traffic manager for 10 years. She holds a B.A. in Asian Studies from Cornell University.
New product line, new customers, new revenue ... what's not to like? Nothing—unless that nice new chunk of business doesn't fit well with your existing process for packaging and shipping orders.
That was the position Koch Entertainment found itself in two years ago. The company, which bills itself as the largest independent wholesale distributor of music and videos in North America, had just taken on fulfillment of direct-to-consumer orders for some of its customers, most of which are music retailers. Trouble was, the picking, packing, and shipping system in its distribution center was designed to handle cartons, not the individual CDs or DVDs needed to fill consumers' orders.
Picking was no problem, but the flood of small orders gummed up the works when they reached the packing stations. Fortunately, Koch quickly found a solution. An automated packaging system directed by a warehouse control system (WCS) not only broke up the logjam, it also allowed the distributor to ship out more orders in much less time. It's so efficient, in fact, that the company will be able to take on even more new business without skipping a beat.
Shipper sings the blues
Koch Entertainment Distribution handles distribution for dozens of music and video labels, large and small, from its distribution centers in the United States and Canada. The U.S. organization serves customers from a 90,000-square-foot DC staffed by some 80 employees in Port Washington, N.Y. Each day, the DC ships out between 2,500 and 3,000 mail orders to consumers by UPS, FedEx, and the U.S. Postal Service, and about 1,500 larger shipments by parcel carrier or less-than-truckload to its customers' warehouses and DCs.
show stoppers
Automated packaging systems are available in all sorts of variations, ranging from stand-alone, manual equipment all the way up to fully automated solutions that can be integrated with material handling and data-capture devices as well as with warehouse management, warehouse control, and automated shipping systems.
If you'd like to learn more and see some of this equipment in action, consider attending one of these trade shows:
PackExpo: Sponsored by the Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute (PMMI), this year's event was held Nov. 9-13 in Chicago. PackExpo 2009 is scheduled for October 5-7 in Las Vegas.
ProMat 2009: Sponsored by the Material
Handling Industry of America (MHIA), the big show will be held in
Chicago from Jan. 12 through 15, 2009.
Interpack: The world's largest trade fair for the packaging industry, Interpack is held in Düsseldorf, Germany, every three years. This year's event has come and gone; the next show will be held May 12-18, 2011.
Until late 2006, the DC had handled only wholesale orders for music and video retailers. But with online sales of CDs, DVDs, and other entertainment media growing fast, Koch saw an opportunity to swiftly expand its business. The distributor could cut time and cost for its retailer customers by fulfilling individual consumer orders directly from its own DC, rather than shipping orders in bulk to the retailers' facilities for repackaging and fulfillment.
Koch's distribution center had the capacity to take on the additional business. The facility already was highly automated, with a 125,000-location, 21-level storage and retrieval system; a futuristic robotic picking system developed by a sister company in Austria; and an automated storage and retrieval crane for large orders. Orders were picked to totes, which then traveled by conveyor to a series of bulk shipping stations. There, workers would perform the labor-intensive process of taking the items from the totes, scanning them, packing them in boxes, adding dunnage and packing slips to the cartons, sealing the cartons, and sending them on to shipping.
This worked well for the large commercial orders the system was designed for. But when Koch took on fulfillment of individual consumer orders—and the volume of those orders grew more quickly than expected—the packing stations couldn't keep up with the flood of small items, and backlogs soon developed.
There were two reasons for the holdups. First, the warehouse management system assigned each order to a separate tote or group of totes. "If we got 500 orders, we potentially could get 500 totes, with orders as small as one piece per tote taking up prime real estate on the conveyor," says Phil Wulff, senior vice president of logistics. And second, because it took much longer to manually pack, say, 100 individual consumer orders than it did to pack a bulk order of 100 items, throughput slowed dramatically.
Any sort of slowdown, though, was unacceptable. For one thing, the entertainment industry is extremely time-sensitive: New products must be in retail stores and mail orders must be available to ship on the announced release, or "street," date, Wulff explains. "You can't get them there too early because you don't want them on the shelf before the street date, and you don't want them to get there late or they won't sell," he notes. For another, it was taking two or more days to ship some direct-to-consumer orders, and Koch's customers required same-day shipping for those orders. Wulff and John Papazoros, Koch's senior director of distribution, had to find a way to move orders through the packing stations much faster. The solution would be to automate the cumbersome manual packaging process—and there was not a moment to lose.
Just what they needed
For help, Koch turned to systems integrator Glen Road Systems Inc. (GRSI), which had extensive experience with automated packaging solutions. GRSI's task was to figure out "how to achieve the best results with the least amount of labor and cost," says Steve Martyn, the integrator's CEO.
After examining Koch's existing operation and considering its future needs, GRSI and partner Sealed Air Corp., a manufacturer of automated packaging equipment and packing materials, developed a solution that filled the bill. Just three weeks after the backlog began to develop, they installed what Martyn calls an "in-motion order and packaging fulfillment system." This solution included Sealed Air's PriorityPak automated packaging equipment, along with automatic feeders, scanners, a bar-code printer, an in-motion scale, a print-and-apply labeler, and a sorter. All of these components are controlled by GRSI's proprietary FastTrak warehouse control system.
Now, 100 small orders at a time are batch picked into a tote, which operators scan and place on a conveyor. When the tote arrives at the packaging system, another operator removes the CDs and DVDs and stacks them in an automatic feeder. An induction scanner reads the bar code on each individual item. The WCS then asks the warehouse management system to identify the next order for those items and matches the items with that order. "There could be five different orders with the same product. PriorityPak grabs the first order its sees and starts the whole packaging process," Papazoros explains. "When it sees that SKU (stock-keeping unit) again, it reaches for the next order with that item."
As the items move down the line, PriorityPak scans their dimensions and dispenses two sheets of rigid cardboard, sized to fit the items on the conveyor. The underside of the board is coated with a special cohesive, which sticks only to itself and not to the items sandwiched between the sheets, says Jeff Zahansky, Sealed Air's business manager for automated packaging. As the machine gently compresses and seals the coated board to create a protective package, the cohesive closes around the product and prevents it from shifting. The package provides extra protection for the corners of the CDs and DVDs, where damage is most likely to occur in transportation. Essentially, says Martyn, the packing stations have been converted from assembly operations to manufacturing operations, where packaging is created on demand.
Meanwhile, the FastTrak WCS scans the item's bar code and assigns it to a random bar code that is preprinted on the rigid board. The latter bar code functions as a "license plate" for a particular customer order, and the system creates a "marriage" between the two bar codes for tracking purposes, Wulff says. The items then move on down the line to be scanned once again, and then weighed, labeled, and sorted for shipping. Martyn notes that the WCS is tied into Koch's automated parcel shipping system, so that information about the order seamlessly moves from packaging to shipping, with no need to rekey.
With PriorityPak handling about 1,200 orders an hour, orders can be weighed, packaged, and labeled in a little over two hours—a big improvement over the two days it often took with manual packaging processes. "Once we got the machine commissioned, the problems were quickly solved," Papazoros says.
Not every mail order passes through the PriorityPak system. Some items—bulky boxed sets, for instance—are too big for the fully automated line. Based on each SKU's characteristics, the WCS directs oversized items to the most appropriate of Koch's other packing stations, including some that are partially or fully manual. If they're part of an order that includes small items from the automated station, they are reunited with the rest of the order during pre-shipping sortation.
Savings signed, sealed, delivered ...
As for the cost of this type of equipment, Martyn and Zahansky estimate that prices for automatic packaging system range from around $60,000 to $115,000 for low-tech, largely manual equipment, to about $200,000 to $300,000 for a mid-range system, and $350,000 or so for a completely automated in-motion fulfillment system with extras like a shipping sorter. All of them, Zahansky says, typically achieve payback in less than one year.
For Koch Entertainment, the payback has come on several fronts. PriorityPak handles so many orders in so little time that the company was able to eliminate five of its packing and shipping stations. The cost of packaging materials and dunnage has declined, as has the incidence of in-transit damage. Orders now fly through the system so swiftly that some customers have actually complained that they ship out too quickly, Wulff laughs.
Getting orders out sooner opened the way for Koch to ship a lot more of its direct-to-consumer orders via the U.S. Postal Service. Using the Postal Service lets the distributor pay by the ounce instead of by the pound, at a "considerable" savings, says Papazoros. (Koch does use third-party expeditor services, including FedEx SmartPost and UPS Mail Innovations, for those mail shipments.) Wulff and Papazoros consider the automated system to be more than a money saver; it's a moneymaker as well, they say. Although PriorityPak is currently processing 1,200 small orders per hour, the integrated system can handle up to 3,000 per hour. "As our business grows, we have the ability to add more throughput," says Wulff. "And if we didn't have this automation, we could not have taken on the mail order business. Automating allowed us to go out and get more business."
Artificial intelligence (AI) and data science were hot business topics in 2024 and will remain on the front burner in 2025, according to recent research published in AI in Action, a series of technology-focused columns in the MIT Sloan Management Review.
In Five Trends in AI and Data Science for 2025, researchers Tom Davenport and Randy Bean outline ways in which AI and our data-driven culture will continue to shape the business landscape in the coming year. The information comes from a range of recent AI-focused research projects, including the 2025 AI & Data Leadership Executive Benchmark Survey, an annual survey of data, analytics, and AI executives conducted by Bean’s educational firm, Data & AI Leadership Exchange.
The five trends range from the promise of agentic AI to the struggle over which C-suite role should oversee data and AI responsibilities. At a glance, they reveal that:
Leaders will grapple with both the promise and hype around agentic AI. Agentic AI—which handles tasks independently—is on the rise, in the form of generative AI bots that can perform some content-creation tasks. But the authors say it will be a while before such tools can handle major tasks—like make a travel reservation or conduct a banking transaction.
The time has come to measure results from generative AI experiments. The authors say very few companies are carefully measuring productivity gains from AI projects—particularly when it comes to figuring out what their knowledge-based workers are doing with the freed-up time those projects provide. Doing so is vital to profiting from AI investments.
The reality about data-driven culture sets in. The authors found that 92% of survey respondents feel that cultural and change management challenges are the primary barriers to becoming data- and AI-driven—indicating that the shift to AI is about much more than just the technology.
Unstructured data is important again. The ability to apply Generative AI tools to manage unstructured data—such as text, images, and video—is putting a renewed focus on getting all that data into shape, which takes a whole lot of human effort. As the authors explain “organizations need to pick the best examples of each document type, tag or graph the content, and get it loaded into the system.” And many companies simply aren’t there yet.
Who should run data and AI? Expect continued struggle. Should these roles be concentrated on the business or tech side of the organization? Opinions differ, and as the roles themselves continue to evolve, the authors say companies should expect to continue to wrestle with responsibilities and reporting structures.
Shippers today are praising an 11th-hour contract agreement that has averted the threat of a strike by dockworkers at East and Gulf coast ports that could have frozen container imports and exports as soon as January 16.
The agreement came late last night between the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) representing some 45,000 workers and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) that includes the operators of port facilities up and down the coast.
Details of the new agreement on those issues have not yet been made public, but in the meantime, retailers and manufacturers are heaving sighs of relief that trade flows will continue.
“Providing certainty with a new contract and avoiding further disruptions is paramount to ensure retail goods arrive in a timely manner for consumers. The agreement will also pave the way for much-needed modernization efforts, which are essential for future growth at these ports and the overall resiliency of our nation’s supply chain,” Gold said.
The next step in the process is for both sides to ratify the tentative agreement, so negotiators have agreed to keep those details private in the meantime, according to identical statements released by the ILA and the USMX. In their joint statement, the groups called the six-year deal a “win-win,” saying: “This agreement protects current ILA jobs and establishes a framework for implementing technologies that will create more jobs while modernizing East and Gulf coasts ports – making them safer and more efficient, and creating the capacity they need to keep our supply chains strong. This is a win-win agreement that creates ILA jobs, supports American consumers and businesses, and keeps the American economy the key hub of the global marketplace.”
The breakthrough hints at broader supply chain trends, which will focus on the tension between operational efficiency and workforce job protection, not just at ports but across other sectors as well, according to a statement from Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos, a freight booking and payment platform. Port automation was the major sticking point leading up to this agreement, as the USMX pushed for technologies to make ports more efficient, while the ILA opposed automation or semi-automation that could threaten jobs.
"This is a six-year détente in the tech-versus-labor tug-of-war at U.S. ports," Levine said. “Automation remains a lightning rod—and likely one we’ll see in other industries—but this deal suggests a cautious path forward."
Editor's note: This story was revised on January 9 to include additional input from the ILA, USMX, and Freightos.
Logistics industry growth slowed in December due to a seasonal wind-down of inventory and following one of the busiest holiday shopping seasons on record, according to the latest Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) report, released this week.
The monthly LMI was 57.3 in December, down more than a percentage point from November’s reading of 58.4. Despite the slowdown, economic activity across the industry continued to expand, as an LMI reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below 50 indicates contraction.
The LMI researchers said the monthly conditions were largely due to seasonal drawdowns in inventory levels—and the associated costs of holding them—at the retail level. The LMI’s Inventory Levels index registered 50, falling from 56.1 in November. That reduction also affected warehousing capacity, which slowed but remained in expansion mode: The LMI’s warehousing capacity index fell 7 points to a reading of 61.6.
December’s results reflect a continued trend toward more typical industry growth patterns following recent years of volatility—and they point to a successful peak holiday season as well.
“Retailers were clearly correct in their bet to stock [up] on goods ahead of the holiday season,” the LMI researchers wrote in their monthly report. “Holiday sales from November until Christmas Eve were up 3.8% year-over-year according to Mastercard. This was largely driven by a 6.7% increase in e-commerce sales, although in-person spending was up 2.9% as well.”
And those results came during a compressed peak shopping cycle.
“The increase in spending came despite the shorter holiday season due to the late Thanksgiving,” the researchers also wrote, citing National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates that U.S. shoppers spent just short of a trillion dollars in November and December, making it the busiest holiday season of all time.
The LMI is a monthly survey of logistics managers from across the country. It tracks industry growth overall and across eight areas: inventory levels and costs; warehousing capacity, utilization, and prices; and transportation capacity, utilization, and prices. The report is released monthly by researchers from Arizona State University, Colorado State University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rutgers University, and the University of Nevada, Reno, in conjunction with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP).
The overall national industrial real estate vacancy rate edged higher in the fourth quarter, although it still remains well below pre-pandemic levels, according to an analysis by Cushman & Wakefield.
Vacancy rates shrunk during the pandemic to historically low levels as e-commerce sales—and demand for warehouse space—boomed in response to massive numbers of people working and living from home. That frantic pace is now cooling off but real estate demand remains elevated from a long-term perspective.
“We've witnessed an uptick among firms looking to lease larger buildings to support their omnichannel fulfillment strategies and maintain inventory for their e-commerce, wholesale, and retail stock. This trend is not just about space, but about efficiency and customer satisfaction,” Jason Tolliver, President, Logistics & Industrial Services, said in a release. “Meanwhile, we're also seeing a flurry of activity to support forward-deployed stock models, a strategy that keeps products closer to the market they serve and where customers order them, promising quicker deliveries and happier customers.“
The latest figures show that industrial vacancy is likely nearing its peak for this cooling cycle in the coming quarters, Cushman & Wakefield analysts said.
Compared to the third quarter, the vacancy rate climbed 20 basis points to 6.7%, but that level was still 30 basis points below the 10-year, pre-pandemic average. Likewise, overall net absorption in the fourth quarter—a term for the amount of newly developed property leased by clients—measured 36.8 million square feet, up from the 33.3 million square feet recorded in the third quarter, but down 20% on a year-over-year basis.
In step with those statistics, real estate developers slowed their plans to erect more buildings. New construction deliveries continued to decelerate for the second straight quarter. Just 85.3 million square feet of new industrial product was completed in the fourth quarter, down 8% quarter-over-quarter and 48% versus one year ago.
Likewise, only four geographic markets saw more than 20 million square feet of completions year-to-date, compared to 10 markets in 2023. Meanwhile, as construction starts remained tempered overall, the under-development pipeline has continued to thin out, dropping by 36% annually to its lowest level (290.5 million square feet) since the third quarter of 2018.
Despite the dip in demand last quarter, the market for industrial space remains relatively healthy, Cushman & Wakefield said.
“After a year of hesitancy, logistics is entering a new, sustained growth phase,” Tolliver said. “Corporate capital is being deployed to optimize supply chains, diversify networks, and minimize potential risks. What's particularly encouraging is the proactive approach of retailers, wholesalers, and 3PLs, who are not just reacting to the market, but shaping it. 2025 will be a year characterized by this bias for action.”
Under terms of the deal, Sick and Endress+Hauser will each hold 50% of a joint venture called "Endress+Hauser SICK GmbH+Co. KG," which will strengthen the development and production of analyzer and gas flow meter technologies. According to Sick, its gas flow meters make it possible to switch to low-emission and non-fossil energy sources, for example, and the process analyzers allow reliable monitoring of emissions.
As part of the partnership, the product solutions manufactured together will now be marketed by Endress+Hauser, allowing customers to use a broader product portfolio distributed from a single source via that company’s global sales centers.
Under terms of the contract between the two companies—which was signed in the summer of 2024— around 800 Sick employees located in 42 countries will transfer to Endress+Hauser, including workers in the global sales and service units of Sick’s “Cleaner Industries” division.
“This partnership is a perfect match,” Peter Selders, CEO of the Endress+Hauser Group, said in a release. “It creates new opportunities for growth and development, particularly in the sustainable transformation of the process industry. By joining forces, we offer added value to our customers. Our combined efforts will make us faster and ultimately more successful than if we acted alone. In this case, one and one equals more than two.”
According to Sick, the move means that its current customers will continue to find familiar Sick contacts available at Endress+Hauser for consulting, sales, and service of process automation solutions. The company says this approach allows it to focus on its core business of factory and logistics automation to meet global demand for automation and digitalization.
Sick says its core business has always been in factory and logistics automation, which accounts for more than 80% of sales, and this area remains unaffected by the new joint venture. In Sick’s view, automation is crucial for industrial companies to secure their productivity despite limited resources. And Sick’s sensor solutions are a critical part of industrial automation, which increases productivity through artificial intelligence and the digital networking of production and supply chains.