Home Bots & Business Autonomous Robots improve inventory management, price integrity and planogram compliance

Autonomous Robots improve inventory management, price integrity and planogram compliance

by Pieter Werner

Badger Technologies, a product division of Jabil and provider of retail automation, has announced a production rollout of its Badger Technologies multipurpose autonomous robots with Busy Beaver Building Centers, operator of 25 full-line home improvement centers in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.

Following a successful pilot launched earlier this year, Badger Technologies is deploying production robots starting at a new store in Delmont, Penn., where associates seamlessly manage more than 33,000 Stock Keeping Units (SKUs) while embracing the latest in retail automation to improve operations and shopping experiences.

As part of Busy Beaver’s commitment to adopt leading-edge technology, the company has fully embraced Electronic Shelf Labels to eliminate manual price changes, as well as more closely monitor in-store traffic and buying trends. In fact, the Delmont location is one of the first home-improvement stores in the U.S. to use digital price tags exclusively for its inventory.

The impact of inflation, supply chain disruptions, labor shortages and upticks in spending across the home-improvement sector led to myriad operational challenges for Busy Beaver, including the pressure to handle a month’s worth of price changes in a week. To reduce this burden, Badger Technologies integrates pricing data collected during the robot’s daily inventory shelf scans with Busy Beaver’s digital price tag system using an open Application Programming Interface (API).

Additionally, Badger Technologies multipurpose autonomous robots enable Busy Beaver to keep shelves fully stocked with the right mix of products at the right prices without overburdening employees. Previously, manual inventory checks took more than 80 hours per week, with several employees dedicated to the effort. Now, the robot scans all shelves and planograms each night and generates a report that takes approximately 30-to-40 minutes to review.

Plans are underway to deploy robots at additional Busy Beaver locations to support associates to optimize store performance while elevating customer service. “The reaction from our employees has been very warm, inviting and thankful,” said Kevin Michel, general manager of Busy Beaver’s Delmont store. “It’s a game changer because they now can focus on being a salesperson, cashier or handling inventory control versus going and looking for thousands of items throughout the store.”

Misschien vind je deze berichten ook interessant