A Step-by-Step Guide to Smart Planning and Vendor Selection
Introduction
Warehouse automation can drive faster operations, higher accuracy, and significant cost savings — but jumping in without a clear plan is a recipe for wasted investment.
Many businesses make the mistake of rushing into automation by buying equipment without fully understanding their operational needs, future scalability, or system integration requirements.
In this article, we’ll walk you through how to start warehouse automation the right way — from initial planning to choosing the right technology and vendor — based on real-world project experience across Malaysia and Southeast Asia.
Step 1: Define the Business Objectives First
Before looking at robots or software, clarify why you're considering automation.
Common goals include:
- Reduce labor dependency and headcount
- Improve picking speed and order accuracy
- Scale up operations to support business growth
- Maximize space utilization
- Enable better traceability or compliance
Pro Tip: Be specific — e.g., “reduce picking manpower by 40% in 18 months” is better than “increase efficiency.”
Step 2: Understand Your Current Operations
You can’t automate what you don’t understand.
Conduct a warehouse diagnostic:
- Map your inbound, storage, picking, and outbound flows
- Measure current throughput, cycle times, error rates
- Identify bottlenecks and pain points
- Capture seasonal and SKU movement patterns
Tools You Can Use:
- Heatmaps or SKU velocity analysis
- Time-and-motion studies
- Slotting and space utilization reports
SupplySense often starts automation projects with a baseline assessment and quick win identification.
Step 3: Build a Future-State Concept
Once you know where you are, define where you want to go.
Create a concept layout that includes:
- Material flow redesign
- Storage types (e.g., racks, shelving, totes)
- Preliminary automation zones (e.g., AMR, pick-to-light, sorter)
- Integration points (WMS, ERP, WES)
Even if you’re not ready for full automation, planning your warehouse with automation-readiness ensures scalability and avoids rework later.
Step 4: Validate ROI Before Spending
Automation should pay for itself.
Estimate:
- Current manpower and operating costs
- Savings from automation (labor, errors, overtime)
- Capital investment required (equipment + integration)
- Payback period (ideally within 2–4 years)
Example:
A client spending RM 85,000/month on manual ops saw RM 50,000 in monthly savings by implementing AMRs — payback in 2.3 years.
SupplySense provides ROI modeling and cost-benefit analysis as part of our feasibility studies.
Step 5: Choose the Right Vendor (Not Just the Right Equipment)
All automation vendors are not created equal.
You want a solution partner, not just an equipment seller.
Key Vendor Criteria:
- Proven projects (local references in your industry)
- Technical flexibility (modular, scalable systems)
- WMS/WES integration capability
- Training and after-sales support availability
- Transparent TCO (total cost of ownership)
Bonus Tip: Ask to visit a live customer site or pilot facility.
We help clients evaluate vendors like HIKROBOT, Geek+, Hai Robotics, and local integrators to find the best fit.
Step 6: Pilot First, Then Scale
Start with a defined pilot zone:
- One picking area
- One SKU group (fast-movers)
- Limited fleet of AMRs or pick stations
Final Thoughts
Warehouse automation isn’t a tech project — it’s a business transformation.
The most successful implementations we’ve seen had:
- Clear objectives
- Thoughtful planning
- Independent ROI validation
- Trusted vendor partnerships
- Hands-on change management
At SupplySense Solutions, we specialize in helping clients make smart automation decisions — from initial study to go-live and post-deployment support.
Ready to Start Your Automation Journey?
We offer:
- Automation Readiness Assessments
- ROI & Feasibility Studies
- Vendor Selection & Solution Design
- Full Project Oversight from Planning to Commissioning
Email us supplysense99@gmail.com or book us a consultation call

