Resurgence in cross-docking drives efficiency, speed-to-market

For product manufacturers and contract packagers—especially those involved in logistics—cross-docking provides a welcome boost in production, as well as savings.

CROSS-DOCKING BASICS. In a cross-docking operation, inbound dock doors line up on one side of a long, narrow building, with outb
CROSS-DOCKING BASICS. In a cross-docking operation, inbound dock doors line up on one side of a long, narrow building, with outb

“Today, more than ever, companies are scrutinizing their supply chains in search of creative ways to take costs out of the system, manage inventory levels, increase efficiencies, and satisfy mercurial customer demand,” states a new white paper from Saddle Creek Corp., a supplier of logistics, contract packaging and fulfillment.

“Cross-docking is one strategy drawing increasing consideration. While not a new practice, it has seen a resurgence of interest in recent years. Its ability to shorten the shipping cycle, control inventory carrying costs, and deliver just-in-time service with a minimal upfront investment makes cross-docking an attractive option for many companies responding to economic pressures.”

Cross-docking is a term that is almost self-explanatory. Inbound dock doors line up on one side of a long, narrow building, with outbound dock doors directly opposite, and very little in-between to impede product flow. The key is to immediately identify incoming truckloads of product, usually with bar code scanners, and then divert what product is needed to outbound trucks already being loaded.

According to Saddle Creek’s research, about 69% of consumer product companies use cross-docking operations, and another 15% plan to add cross-docking capabilities.

“A typical cross-docked product will be identified at the time it is being unloaded from the inbound truckload, and at that time the system identifies the opportunity to use the product for an outbound order that is in process at that point. Product does not go into inventory,” explains Mike Marlowe, vice president of customer innovations at Kane Is Able, Scranton, PA. The contract packager and logistics supplier has been doing cross-docking for more than 25 years.

Lakeland, FL-based Saddle Creek finds that, for customers outsourcing their packaging function, cross-docking boosts efficiencies, says Tom Patterson, senior vice president of warehouse operations. “We package the product and send it right back out. Our goal is to add value wherever we can. The cross-docking function can either be a standalone offering or included in a package of offerings that we provide to a customer.”

Like Kane Is Able, Saddle Creek also has been doing cross-docking for many years. But the business has changed from 20 years ago. “There is a lot more momentum today,” Patterson says. “Back then, logistics as a whole was an afterthought. Now, we can gain efficiency in the flow of product, taking days off the production cycle.

“We have some customers who want us to do only cross-docking, and others who blend cross-docking with traditional logistics,” Patterson continues. “For some retail customers, we know we can never run out of their top-selling products “A,” “B,” or “C.” Other retailers want us to hold the product in storage for them until that product is needed. Looking up the supply chain, however, cross-docking is somewhat invisible to the suppliers. With vendor- or supplier-managed inventories, the vendor can reap benefits from cross-docking, like speed-to-market and a reduction in supply chain costs, but it is more of a downstream customer benefit or customer requirement.”

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