Learn More About Warehousing

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Presentation transcript:

1. Warehousing and Storage Techniques Warehousing and Storage Techniques 2. There Are Different Types of Warehousing There Are Different Types of Warehousing

 A warehouse is usually where the large delivery truck will pull up to the loading dock and the dockworkers come out and quickly unload the truck. At that point the goods wait for another local truck to pick up the materials to be taken to the retail store to be stocked on the shelves and sold.  The warehouses in America provide a fulfillment of your orders based on the needs and requirements of the markets they delivering to.  There is a warehouse in Houston, Texas that has been servicing the needs of the American people since That is over 60 years; this warehouse is greater than 825,000 square feet, located on 57 acres just north of downtown Houston.

 With over fifteen years that this American warehouse has been offering tenure of American employment. This warehouse is so hands on that if there is any problem within the management team; you can easily pick up the phone and speak with the President of the company.  Not only are there warehouses for retail and production needs, there are also warehouses for the computer industry. These are referred to as “Data Warehouses” (DW or DWH); and another term for them are Enterprise Data Warehouses (EDW). These are used for the reporting of data analysis, considered to be the core component of data intelligence. These DW’s are the essential storehouses which incorporate data into one or more different sources.

 Private Warehousing – Private Warehousing is used by a company often it will be a manufacturing company- to store their own product. The company pays all of the costs associated with it. They may choose to keep the product on-site or off. When he expanded the Ford Motor Company, Henry Ford began sourcing his own steel. Meanwhile, he had to find a place to store it. Choosing to keep everything under one company name, he simply expanded his own company to handle warehousing.  Public Warehousing – Public Warehousing is storage of a product by an outside third-party. They take on the responsibility of inventory and handling for a cost. They are in charge of the equipment maintenance, personnel training, and maintenance of the building.

– Public warehousing space is available for anyone to store just about anything. This is typically a setup with a monthly rate per square footage. Public warehousing is like renting an apartment on a month to month basis. This works especially well for short-term overflow or supply and demand changes for seasonal swings.  Contract Warehousing – Contract warehousing is great for businesses that constantly fluctuate in volume. Regardless of the current holdings of the space, the square footage is contracted to you. If pallets need to be shifted, a fulfillment setup or quality checks need to be performed, then investing in contracted warehouse space is a must. The scope of what needs to be done can be discussed when the contract is created.

 Food Warehousing – Food warehouses have categories of their own:  Dry storage warehouse- provides a clean, dry environment for foods such as rice, oats, and grain that requires no refrigeration  Frozen food storage warehouses- designed to handle perishable foods that require freezing. Warehouses must constantly maintain freezing temperature make sure that frozen foods stay that way.  Refrigerated warehouse- ensures that products that need to be kept at a certain temperature remain at that temperature.

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