Businesses are constantly looking for innovative solutions to enhance warehouse design and operational effectiveness, and simulation modeling moves the needle in your favor. With it, operations like yours can examine any system or process virtually by observing, analyzing, and optimizing its performance.
One chief concern is warehouse layout, which impacts the flow of goods, accessibility, and the overall speed and accuracy of order fulfillment. Warehouse layout optimization can minimize operational costs while improving customer satisfaction with efficient deliveries.
Warehouse design and layout decisions used to be based on intuition and experience. but with the advent of advanced analytics and simulation modeling, businesses have access to data-driven insights to inform optimizations. By collecting and analyzing various types of data such as SKU movement and order-picking patterns, you can now make decisions based on your specific operational needs.
That's where discrete event simulation (DES) comes in! Read on to explore the basic principles for warehouse layout optimization and how you can create an effective model.
Discrete event simulation (DES) models warehouse process efficiency as a series of distinct events occurring over time. Each event represents a specific change or step in the process, such as the arrival of an item, the start of an operation, or the completion of a task. In DES, variables such as resource scheduling and availability, processing time, and queue lengths can change at discrete points in time, changing the system. Because DES allows you to test potential layouts in a risk-free virtual environment, you can use it to assess warehouse changes without costly and time-consuming physical trials.
Each model offers dynamic views of real-world processes, providing a time-based view of system performance that evolves as events occur. The simulation reflects changes over time using a simulation clock, ensuring that events are processed in the correct sequence and that the simulation moves forward to generate reliable results.
Operations use DES to conduct what-if analyses, compare scenarios, and analyze the KPI implications of their decisions with virtual replicas. Operating as a virtual sandbox, it helps validate solutions before implementation by showing real-world performance, helping you enhance efficiency with various warehouse layout optimizations:
Depending on your goals, several pieces of data are necessary to create accurate simulations. Do you want to shorten shipping times or save on operational costs? Improve picking and packing accuracy or optimize space? No matter the goal or combination of goals, gather key information before you get started with DES:
Gain a deep understanding of the operational processes within the warehouse. You must understand the sequence of activities, rules, and constraints associated with each process:
Knowing every angle of your operational processes ensures that you can accurately model them in the simulation.
Think about the equipment and human resources being used. Quantify the resources involved in warehouse utilization, including forklifts, conveyor systems, and automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS). Properly modeling the resources helps with scheduling by simulating their interactions and utilization accurately.
Take time to define both what and how resources are used and their limitations. For equipment, this means understanding capacity, availability, and maintenance schedules. But people have their limits, too. Take stock of what impacts human resources, from the number of workers and their skill levels to shift schedules and breaks. Your WMS and maintenance systems are treasure troves for data to improve simulations, make data-driven decisions, and determine how/if to scale up or down.
Define the performance metrics that you want to measure and analyze during the simulation. These metrics should align with your goals and objectives. Examples of metrics include:
Identifying and tracking these metrics and data allows you to evaluate the efficiency of your warehouse operations and find new ways to improve.
By taking stock of inventory data, you can create accurate DES models that visualize the movement of goods and spotlight bottlenecks and inefficiencies. This way, you can perform inventory optimization, simulating scenarios to determine effective configurations for:
You need SKU data to model the flow of goods under different conditions, including how demand changes, inventory levels, and process improvements impact your system. This information informs how storage allocation impacts picking times, travel distances, and overall throughput so your warehouse can find ways to maximize space, minimize handling times, and improve service.
SimWell stands ready to work with your team using an agile methodology to plan, structure, and build models that solve your warehouse optimization challenges. Our 11-step process leaves no stone unturned.
We kick the process off with a strategic planning session to align stakeholders on the project’s scope and direction, helping you refine your objectives and KPIs while revealing risks and bottlenecks.
Your design spec is a guide for the simulation model. SimWell relies on a proven template as our guidepost to draft a design spec capable of solving your challenges.
The prototype begins to put your model to the test, helping to understand its accuracy to your operation. During this phase, we can ask key questions about accuracy and performance while identifying details not incorporated in the initial planning.
We also need to understand your exact data requirements. With this intel, we can determine data sources to consult and ensure efficient model-building.
Engineers take your complex ideas and distill them into a usable model that visualizes your processes and addresses your specific challenges.
Make sure your model fulfills its purpose. We align your model with your operations to ensure it can reliably and accurately execute scenario planning.
No model is perfect right away. Debugging helps us identify and resolve problems to ensure accuracy and performance.
Is your model ready? SimWell runs a variety of scenarios, analyzing along the way to ensure the model reflects your objectives and KPIs.
Working together with stakeholders, we review the tested scenarios and outcomes to ensure decision-making that aligns with your needs.
Your model should be easy to use, and we provide training for all users to ensure that everyone from executives to engineers can benefit from it.
Keep reaping the benefits long into the future with robust documentation to keep the model’s utility intact.
Warehouses just like yours have benefited from DES-based layout optimization. Consider how SimWell has applied discrete event simulation to improve both sorting and throughput.
An online CPG retailer needed an automated sorting system to enhance fulfillment, turning to SimWell to create a simulation model that would help with design. The simulation needed to model the conveyor network and workstations, including the amount of time and workers needed for each wave.
The customer needed an optimized model that would reflect all the moving parts of their sorting system to drive maximum efficiency. The simulation had to be capable of testing different scenarios in support of several goals:
The SimWell team created a configurable conveyor network by updating the number of loops and workstations. Two process flows were simulated:
These simulations worked to optimize crate feeding sequences in the conveyor system, reduce workstation queuing, and increase facility throughput. To simulate different scenarios and configurations, users can alter controllable parameters, including but not limited to:
To accommodate impressive retail traffic, one client needed to create an equally impressive warehouse design. They turned to SimWell for greenfield analysis and simulation support to answer questions surrounding both resources and design needs. The simulation model needed to provide a budget-friendly way to understand resources and make accurate business decisions.
With a complex infrastructure of numerous dock doors, staging areas, pallet/SKU categorization, sortation stations, and conveyor systems, the client needed a risk-free way to test their system. On top of this, each activity involved several variables. As a result, simulation became the only compatible solution to understand and prevent bottlenecks.
SimWell began by collecting data on current warehouse operations, including layout, order fulfillment processes, and staffing levels, to create a simulation model. Built in Anylogic, the model represented warehouse operations, testing against forecasted inbound volume increases. This allowed the client to test different scenarios, including:
Simulation revealed concerns over how well the main conveyor and processing stations could handle increased volumes, with bottlenecks around inbound pallet turnaround and truck queues.
Thanks to simulation modeling, the client was able to spot bottlenecks before implementation, cutting costs. They walked away with recommendations for redesigning the inbound conveyor system and can continue to test how various conveyor configurations meet their operational needs.
Using DES for warehouse layout optimization can put your organization on the path to success. Simulations of your operations provide new insights into the effects of process changes upstream and downstream. With this visibility, it’s much easier to right-size your warehouse—from dock doors and layout to equipment and processes.
You can rest easy knowing that your design works for your needs. The risk of the system not meeting objectives is significantly lowered in a tailored design, where you can test and validate operations like wave planning. This trust will permeate the organization to boost stakeholder alignment and confidence, too. DES offers the flexibility to scale within your operation and across your network, making it invaluable for warehouse layout optimization.