Six Months to
Success
Zappos recruited robots to fulfill apparel orders
By Connie Robbins Gentry
The Kiva solution offered critical
advantages: First and foremost was
the speed to implementation. The
contract was signed in February
2008, and the system was fully operational in July.
“The Kiva system is very flexible
because robots can be reconfigured anytime,” said Adkins. “It is
a completely portable solution rather than a fixed asset, which is
particularly good since we are leasing the building and, if we
move, the robots go with us. Also, the system is very granular;
we can buy one robot at a time if we choose.”
Currently Zappos has 70 robots; 10 stations and 3,000 storage pods (the 3-ft.-square, 6-ft.-tall shelving system that the
robots transport). Although this is a higher ratio of pods to
robots than most retailers have deployed, Adkins explained that
Zappos operates with a storage-intensive inventory. The distribution complex has approximately 4 million units in total
inventory with roughly
500,000 of those units,
primarily apparel products, stored in the Kiva
pods.
He described the benefits associated with the
robots, and the resulting
“cost avoidance” as huge:
“Kiva robots use about half
the energy resources [com-pared with Zappos’ other
fulfillment systems]; the
robots are two times more
labor efficient, and they are
much faster,” Adkins said.
“We can easily fulfill an
order in 8 to 12 minutes —
from the time a customer
places the order online
until it is processed
through the DC and
shipped out the door.” ■
Unlike conveyors, robots
at the Zappos DC are
virtually soundless
and operate in reduced
lighting, producing a
cooler climate and
reduced energy
consumption.
J.C. Penney Implements a 980-ft.-Long Sorter
J.C. Penney gained speed-to-market when the Plano, Texas- based retailer brought its sixth Retail Logistics Center live in
just six months. Like Zappos (see main story), J.C. Penney leased
an existing facility and outfitted it with a new and dramatically
efficient technology.
Opened July 2007 in Lathrop, Calif., the 436,000-sq.-ft. RLC is a
cross-dock operation that processes container shipments from
nearby Port of Oakland and ships cases to one of J.C. Penney’s 13
regional DCs. Unique to this facility is an integrated sortation
technology from Dematic, Grand Rapids, Mich., that employs a
980-ft.-long single-unit continuous sorter, reportedly the longest
such conveyor in the world.
The sophisticated automation system processes up to 165,000
cases per day at 99.9% accuracy. Each case is only touched two
times at the RLC, once when it is unloaded from the container
and again when it is loaded for outbound shipment. On average,
a typical case spends six minutes in the RLC, which according to
Kevin Williams, facility manager at the Lathrop RLC, has significantly reduced transportation time for J.C. Penney’s direct
imports.
When online footwear retailer Zappos decided to add apparel to its merchandise mix, the biggest challenge was revamping its fulfillment process- es to accommodate garments on hangers and in
bags rather than shoeboxes.
Zappos, based in Las Vegas, has a single centralized distribution center in Shepherdsville, Ky., that does an excellent job of
processing and fulfilling shoe orders. However, the DC did not
have adequate infrastructure or capacity to fulfill orders for
clothing.
Half of the 832,000-sq.-ft. DC was equipped for operations
when it opened in 2006, but the remaining half was left empty
for expansion purposes. At the end of 2007 when the decision
was made to add apparel, the portion of the DC that was built
out was already operating at full capacity.
Craig Adkins, VP services and operations at Zappos, conducted a lengthy analysis to determine the best course of action,
including time-in-motion
studies to understand the
optimum use of space.
“What we needed was
an expansion solution, not
a replacement technology,” noted Adkins, but the
company also wanted to
avoid making a large capital investment in static
assets. The most economical and viable plan
Adkins determined was to
lease a 280,000-sq.-ft.
building, already equipped
with shelving and conveyors and located conveniently across the street
from the Zappos’ DC,
and outfit it with an
autonomous robot solution from Kiva Systems,
Woburn, Mass.
46
chainstoreage.com
CHAIN STORE AGE, JULY 2009