21st Century Automation: What's It Mean For IT Staffing?

Companies are operating leaner and hiring less, but IT pros gifted in analytics, workflow re-engineering, and other areas are in greater demand.

InformationWeek Staff, Contributor

August 9, 2011

2 Min Read

IT Salaries: 9 Ways We've Changed From 2001

IT Salaries: 9 Ways We've Changed From 2001


Slideshow: IT Salaries: 9 Ways We've Changed From 2001 (click image for larger view and for slideshow)

For the first time in history, we have an economic recovery without corresponding rehiring because corporate automation and other factors are allowing companies to function leaner. It's a frightening change for some, but it also opens opportunities for IT professionals who are gifted in analytics, workflow re-engineering, vendor management, and integration. One case in point is warehousing and what has happened there to allow companies to respond rapidly to market conditions while keeping costs down with IT.

It begins with a sea change in how companies think about warehouses. In the 20th century, warehouses were perceived as a "necessary evil," packed with processes that were largely manual and inventory that frequently had to be expedited at the last minute because the warehouse wasn't integrated with marketing and planning. ERP (enterprise resource planning) systems came on the scene to address this, but still the warehouse lagged.

Twenty-first century warehouse system thinking is different. Suddenly, warehousing is in nearly every company's strategic goals. It is being viewed as an area of competitive advantage. Some of the pressures for change are due to increased global competition for customer wallet share, but equally important is the continuing growth of e-commerce, which thus far in the 21st century is seeing an annual growth rate of 12% to 14%. From an IT standpoint, this requires an integration of multiple shipping channels in real time with the warehouse.

But perhaps the largest warehouse sea change is philosophical. Companies are systematically moving their warehouses to the "front lines" of the customer experience, recognizing that instantaneous order fulfillment (and customer gratification) are crucial (and difficult to achieve) in e-commerce, and are only attainable with 21st century warehouse technologies.

"Investing in your warehouse is not just about cost reduction anymore," says Mitch Rosenberg, VP of marketing at Kiva Systems, a supplier of automated material handling order fulfillment systems. "Twenty-first century consumers are different than their 20th century predecessors, so the warehouse must also be able to contribute to a beneficial customer experience."

Delivering the right goods on time to an expectant e-commerce customer often means that the warehouse distribution center becomes the "store," and the end customer experience becomes the experience that is happening within the warehouse.

Read the rest of this article on Network Computing.

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