ity. So when a tenant vacated a nearby warehouse, the company bought the building, according to Kent Kleeberger, the
retailer’s chief operating officer and executive vice president.
Initially, Chico’s moved its entire Soma business to the second distribution center, a 300,000-square-foot facility. Chico’s
then shifted its direct-to-consumer fulfillment for its other
three brands to that second site.
In 2011, while Chico’s was still mulling its options for handling the steady increases in online orders and further store
expansions, it acquired Boston Proper, a company that sold its
merchandise—women’s apparel and accessories—only
through catalogs or its website. (In 2013, Boston Proper finally
opened a brick-and-mortar store.)
Chico’s concluded that its legacy
systems and processes would not
be able to support the company’s
growth plans, especially since it
planned to open 120 stores annually over the next five years. At the
same time, it wanted to avoid the
cost of expanding the buildings.
Ultimately, Chico’s decided to
automate its second distribution
center, which the company calls
“DC-2,” to handle multichannel distribution. The first DC would continue to do “purchase-order push”
shipments, in which goods from an inbound shipment are
pre-allocated for store delivery. Kleeberger says that generally, Chico’s pushes out somewhere between 70 and 85 percent
of inbound shipments to the stores.
The sorter loop provides flexibility for multichannel distri-
bution because each side can be assigned to a different busi-
ness. “The whole process is really fluid,” says Kleeberger.
“Through each wave, we can change the configuration.”
As one side of the oval track is being used for store orders –
say, replenishment shipments for a Soma boutique – the
other side might handle online orders for Boston Proper. “We
can literally process one business down one side of the oval
track and another business on the other side,” says
Kleeberger.
At each end of the cross-belt sorter loop, warehouse workers place product onto one of five induction lines. The induction line transfers the product
onto a cell in the cross belt. A camera scanner located downstream
from the induction area reads the
product’s bar code and sends
information to the Beumer control
system. That system determines
the optimum chute assignment.
When the product reaches the
destination chute, the cross-belt
cell moves the product onto the
chute.
When the chutes are full, a light
signals a person to clear items in
the compartment, and an LCD display indicates the order type – for example, retail. At that
point, depending on destination, the items can be placed in a
carton for conveyance to a dock door or be deposited into a
tote to be delivered to a pack-out station, where the items are
packaged for consumer delivery.
CROSS-BELT SORTER SOLUTION
To prepare for the challenge of handling both retail replenishment and online order fulfillment, Chico’s first reconfig-ured and modified its warehouse management system for
DC-2. The WMS, supplied by Manhattan Associates, provides
picking directions for workers selecting items from both
reserve replenishment inventory and the active pick modules
at the site, which uses a wave picking process.
But the key here – unique to its solution for handling multi-channel distribution – was the deployment of an 840-foot
cross-belt sorter loop, furnished by Beumer Corp. The sorter
occupies a central space between the product storage area
and outgoing shipping area. It features 362 chutes, each with
four compartments. Two compartments are used for the
active sorting of orders by operators handling the packing for
either specific stores or online merchandise; the other two
compartments act as buffers for them. The system can handle
17,000 items an hour.
EFFICIENCY, FLEXIBILITY, AND COST
AVOIDANCE
As for how the new system has worked out, by all accounts,
it’s proved to be a winner. In fact, the cross-belt sorter solution allowed Chico’s to keep up with increased order volume
during the last (2012) holiday season. The company was able
to handle a 35-percent increase in direct-to-consumer orders
during that period.
Kleeberger says the benefits of the cross-belt sorter loop
solution for multichannel distribution include efficiency, flexibility, and cost avoidance from not having to expand its two
buildings. Furthermore, he notes, the investment in automation helped the company control the labor costs associated
with multichannel distribution. “You spend more money on
automation with the intent to get a positive ROI,” he says, “and
part of that ROI is cost avoidance on increased labor to
[accommodate] growth.”
S-12 A SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO DC VELOCITY