According to www.mmh.com, warehouse unitizing — the process of consolidating individual items into stable, transport-ready loads — is undergoing rapid transformation driven by new film materials, smarter equipment, and connected technologies. As automation advances across warehouses, unitizing remains a foundational requirement: robotic palletizers, automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS), and goods-to-person platforms all depend on consistent, secure unit loads.
Core Drivers of Change
The source states that while much attention and investment are focused on high-profile automation, these systems do not operate in isolation. They rely on robust core materials handling — and unitizing sits ‘smack in the middle’ of that ecosystem. Stability, consistency, and load integrity are no longer secondary concerns but prerequisites for downstream automation performance.
Emerging Trends
The report identifies five interrelated shifts reshaping unitizing practices:
- New stretch film materials designed to reduce usage without compromising load stability — many warehouses prioritize reduction over material substitution
- Equipment updates enabling tighter, more repeatable wrapping with less film consumption
- Integration of IoT and connectivity features for real-time monitoring of wrap tension, cycle time, and film usage
- Growing emphasis on sustainability, including recyclable films and right-sized packaging to minimize waste
- Increased labor efficiency as smart wrappers reduce manual intervention and rework
Practitioner Implications
For supply chain professionals, these trends signal a strategic pivot from viewing unitizing as a low-value, manual task to recognizing it as a critical enabler of automation ROI. Inconsistent or unstable unit loads cause downstream delays in AS/RS input, conveyor jams, and robotic palletizer errors — all of which erode throughput gains. According to the report, ‘Everything from robotic palletizers to automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS) and goods-to-person technology need stable, consistent and well-built unit loads.’
The shift also carries operational implications for maintenance planning, film inventory management, and cross-functional alignment between packaging, materials handling, and automation teams. As one industry observation notes: ‘These aren’t your grandfather’s stretch wrappers.’
Source: www.mmh.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










