When it comes to the smooth flow of goods into your
distribution center, the receiving dock can make or break your operation.
Failure to properly manage the intake process turns the receiving dock into a
bottleneck that creates delays for internal teams and
customers.Owning-your-Receiving-Dock
Picture an airport, where the arrival and departure of
flights is as precisely orchestrated as the inner workings of a Swiss watch.
However, if just one incoming flight is delayed, like dominoes, the impacts
ripple down the line. The delayed arrival negatively affects airline workers’
schedules and workloads and the schedules of customers on that flight and
subsequent flights.
Receiving docks are no different. If you don’t manage
the arrival of inbound goods like a crackerjack air traffic controller, it’ll
be tough to manage when products reach customers. Unfortunately, too many
companies let suppliers and carriers run the show. The secret to an organized,
efficient and well-managed intake operation – and better customer service? Take
back the receiving dock. When you own it, good things happen. Here’s how …
Plan your workload to slash waste and save money
This is a simple change that delivers a big payoff. Put
together your receiving schedule the day before goods arrive – complete with
controlled delivery times and piece/pallet counts. When you schedule ahead, you
can pre-plan how many people you need to receive products. A little upfront
planning goes a long way to reducing waste when inbound volumes fall below
capacity and overtime costs when they run over capacity. Here’s an added bonus:
upfront planning frees receiving managers to spend more time on continuous
improvement and lean operations and less triaging out-of-control receiving
schedules.
Get smart about how you use space
When you take control of the flow of materials to the
receiving dock, you can configure the area to reduce costs. Together, smarter
scheduling of inbound truck arrivals and better use of warehouse space deliver
cost-saving dividends. Products are handled less during receiving, which
reduces labor costs and minimizes damage. Smarter warehouse layouts help reduce
fixed rental costs and let you allocate space for more critical requirements.
Schedule all inbound materials to arrive on the same
day
There are lots of reasons why it makes sense to receive
all inbound materials on the same day. Same-day receipt shortens product lead
times, enabling purchasing teams to streamline their buying models. It also
helps reduce inventory levels, which can positively impact accounts payable and
cash flow. Related benefits: better fill rates and service levels.
Free sales & customer service teams to focus on
what matters: your customers
When you know what’s arriving at your dock and when,
your sales and customer service teams can provide customers with more accurate
delivery dates. And when the receiving dock consistently meets those
expectations, your sales and customer service teams shift their attention to
growing the business, rather than putting out customer fires. Consistent fill
rates, accurate lead times and on-time delivery commitments turn customers into
loyal customers.
In today’s business world the pressure to continuously
improve how quickly you can supply products to customers – with fewer delays
and lower costs – has never been greater. But when your carriers and suppliers
dictate what happens at the receiving dock, it’s tough to meet those business
needs. That’s why it pays to own the dock.
- See more at: http://blog.ryder.com/2014/08/who-owns-receiving-dock-you-suppliers-carriers/#sthash.XVyw4CGi.dpuf
http://blog.ryder.com/2014/08/who-owns-receiving-dock-you-suppliers-carriers/