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When voice technology is just a phone call away


October 9, 2008

When it comes to voice technology in the warehouse, most of us are familiar with Voxware and Vocollect, the industry leaders.

 

Datria is a less common name in the supply chain. But I spoke to Doug Brown, Datria’s senior director of product management and marketing, the other day, and they have a different approach to bringing voice into the supply chain than their competitors, one that’s been embraced by Coca Cola Enterprises.

 

First, a little background. While most operations personnel have never heard of Datria, the company has been around since 1997, when it was spun off from Lockheed Martin. Back then, Datria developed speech recognition solutions for defense applications, primarily soldiers in the field. The new company’s mission, according to Brown, was to commercialize the technology and develop speech-enabled applications for mobile workers. “Up until last year,” Brown told me, “our applications were primarily outside the four walls for workers in the field. We had never done traditional voice picking. We saw that as something of a niche application.”

 

Second, when it comes to voice, Datria takes a different approach than its competitors. That’s what intrigued Coca Cola Enterprise (more on this in a moment).

 

As Brown explains it, most solution providers voice enable a device. In a warehouse operation, an order picker for instance, wears a voice-enabled mobile computer on their belt. The middleware software solution on the computing device communicates with a WMS or an ERP solution to get order information or update the system after tasks have been completed and inventory has been picked.

 

Datria, on the other hand, loads the software onto a server in the network instead. The voice solution, then, has an IP address, just like a website. Any worker inside or outside the four walls can access the solution by dialing into the IP address. That may be a ruggedized mobile computing device like a traditional voice system. Or, it code be with a PDA, a voice-over-IP telephone or even a cell phone. “Almost any device that can make a phone call can access the solution,” says Brown. By having the solution on the network, a worker isn’t limited to just working with a WMS solution. The device can work with any solution the worker can dial in to. 

 

That’s what intrigued Coca Cola Enterprises. “They have 75,000 employees, 35,000 of whom are mobile,” says Brown. Out of that number, however, only 5,000 are order pickers. The soft drink bottler wanted a solution they could roll out in their warehouses now and extend later to route managers, store merchandisers, truck drivers, plant maintenance workers, technicians or anyone else may benefit from having hands free access to whatever application they access for their jobs.

 

In the last year, Coca Cola Enterprises has rolled the solution out to their 100 largest warehouses in North America, with 2,100 pickers using off the shelf Cisco wireless phones to pick orders.

 

“The advantage is that I can automate any transaction that’s done in the enterprise with voice,” says Brown. “The system is just a phone call away.”

Posted by Bob Trebilcock on October 9, 2008 | Comments (3)


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at 10/17/2008 1:19:28 AM, Jan Henricsson commented:
If you have 300 pickers in a fairly narrow and concentrated warehouse and they do one pick every 10 second and every pick include 5 digital voice transactions over the network. Every transaction is built up like elements in a sound file in digital form. All this have to be sent over the radio network. By doing this calculation I have difficulties to believe that this can work without frusturating waiting times.
Please let us know if this can work.



at 10/27/2008 1:52:14 PM, Peter Granger commented:
The way the system is implemented (voice traffic app does NOT traverse the WAN), Coke has redeployed checkers, reduced training and staff turnover, and provided safer fork lift truck driving as drivers no longer need to look away at a handheld. The CCE workers and supervisers express to the IT folks that they like the system and the response times are good. This is what Coke (CCE) is saying. On another 'traffic' topic, I'm not sure I can imagine 300 fork lift truck drivers in a fairly narrow and concentrated warehouse - not even European roundabouts could sort that traffic load out!




at 12/15/2008 5:55:37 AM, Jan Henricsson commented:
Working in warehouses with voice terminals is a good way of working. If you have to send all the soundfiles over any netsolution you get a enormous amount of information to send. This will overload any known netsolution when you grow in amount of active terminals and reach a level over 300 orderlines per hour per picker. The advantages you describe and many more are there. A lot of young and enthusiastic company have tried VOIP and Cellphones for picking in warehouses with bad result. Many of them work with very few persons but then they get access time problems. DECT is too limited too.


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