BY PETER BRADLEY,
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
problemsolved
Problem: Keeping up with
the demands of rapid growth
The Problem: Value Drug Mart, an
Edmonton, Alberta-based cooperative of
independent pharmacies, was experiencing
rapid growth. At the same time, the pharmacies were adding to their front-of-store
product mix in a bid to compete with big
box retailers. The combined effect was to
put enormous pressure on fulfillment operations at its central DC in Edmonton.
The DC features multiple pick zones,
including pallet rack, flow rack, standard
shelving, and bulk areas, but the strain was
particularly acute in the shelving area. There,
workers picked from shelving on a two-level
mezzanine, with front-of-store items on the
top level and pharmacy items on the bottom.
Trouble was, the manual process could not
keep up with store demand. “We were picking as fast as staff, shelving, and technology
would permit, but it wasn’t fast enough,” says
Dwayne Bilawchuk, operations manager at
the Edmonton DC.
the goods in one of 10 order totes—each
representing an order for a specific store—as
directed by the put-to-light system. While
workers pick one stock-keeping unit (SKU),
the carousels queue up the next pick, which
eliminates most of the wait time.
Goods picked from the two horizontal
carousel zones move by conveyor to a consolidation area, where they’re combined with
goods picked from other zones to complete
orders for individual stores. The consolidated orders move by conveyor to shipping.
The result has been a major improvement
in productivity, along with near perfect pick
accuracy. “We reached our goals even before
we finished implementation,” Bilawchuk
reports. Under the previous system, pick
rates ran to about 50 lines per hour on each
level. After the new equipment was installed,
pick rates jumped to an average of 350 lines
per hour in the lower carousel zone, which
houses 3,100 front-of-store SKUs, and 575
lines per hour in the upper carousel zone,
which holds 7,100 pharmacy SKUs.
Using carousels also led to a sharp reduction in the labor needed to manage the
orders. With the old system, it took three
workers six hours a day to handle picking in
each zone. With the carousels, a single worker can complete all picks in a zone during a
five-hour shift. The system also freed up
floor space that is now used for bulk storage.
Bilawchuk adds that the carousels have
enabled the company to expand special
offerings. In particular, he cites a program
offered at the start of each school year, Value
Valet, in which school supplies are selected
for individual students and shipped to the
schools marked with each child’s name.
“The carousels are one of the main reasons
we’re able to do that,” he says. ;
THE
PLAYERS
CUSTOMER
Value Drug Mart
Primary business:
Distribution of both
front-of-store goods
and pharmaceuticals
to shareholder
stores. These include
Value Drug Mart
stores, Apple Drug
stores, Rxellence
Professional
Dispensaries, and
about 300 affiliated
stores.
Headquarters:
Edmonton, Alberta
The Solution: Value Drug Mart
found a solution to its problem in automation. After evaluating several options,
Bilawchuk and his team eventually settled
on horizontal carousels from Kardex
Remstar. “We came to realize that horizontal
carousels were best, given our high unit
picks,” he says. The DC replaced two zones
of static shelving with six horizontal
carousels arranged in two zones of three
carousels each.
Under the new system, orders are transmitted by Value Drug’s inventory management system to the carousel zones. Operators
are directed to picks via a pick-to-light system. After selecting items, they scan them
with a reader mounted at either end of the
carousel to confirm the pick, and then place
SUPPLIER
Kardex Remstar LLC,
Westbrook, Maine
SOLUTION
Horizontal carousels
and pick-to-light
technology