Warehouse Automation Success Depends on Foundational Readiness
According to www.inboundlogistics.com, 44% of companies have deployed warehouse robotics, but only 34% of VP and director-level executives report being fully satisfied with the results. This gap highlights a critical issue: automation does not fix flawed operations—it amplifies them.
A DHL Supply Chain study released in late 2025 found that while adoption of robotic systems is growing, the return on investment is inconsistent across organizations. The report attributes this to poor alignment between automation tools and core warehouse processes, particularly in inventory accuracy, system integration, and workflow consistency.
Automation Exposes Weak Foundations
Warehouse management systems (WMS) serve as the operational brain of a facility, coordinating workflows, tracking inventory, and integrating with ERP and robotics platforms. However, many legacy or entry-level WMS platforms were not designed to handle real-time orchestration of autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) or mixed-fleet environments.
When such systems are layered on top of outdated or misaligned processes, the result is congestion, duplicated tasks, and inventory inaccuracies. The source states that automation “accelerates” existing operational misalignments rather than correcting them.
“Automation doesn’t correct operational misalignment, it accelerates it.” — Source Article
Four Key Questions to Assess Readiness
Before committing to robotics deployment, operations leaders should answer four foundational questions:
- Are core processes running consistently, without manual workarounds?
- Is inventory accuracy reliable at a location or unit level?
- Are integrations between WMS, ERP, and existing systems stable and documented?
- Was your WMS built for the operational complexity you’re managing today?
Organizations that achieve strong answers to these questions are more likely to realize measurable gains from automation. According to the report, when systems are aligned, robotics becomes an accelerator rather than a source of complexity.
Practical Tools for Operational Assessment
With decades of experience supporting complex warehouse operations, Made4net offers two tools to guide readiness: a structured Warehouse Complexity Assessment and a WMS Selection Toolkit. The toolkit includes downloadable resources to evaluate, select, and implement a WMS platform capable of supporting advanced automation.
These resources are designed to help companies conduct a thorough evaluation of their current operational maturity before investing in robotics. The report emphasizes that the potential of robotics and automation is undeniable—but the advantage will go to those prepared to support it with a solid foundation.
Industry Context and Real-World Implications
Similar challenges have been reported by other logistics technology providers. For example, a 2024 report by Gartner found that 60% of warehouse automation projects faced delays due to integration issues with existing WMS platforms. This reinforces the conclusion that technical readiness is not just about hardware but about process maturity.
For supply chain professionals, the takeaway is clear: successful automation requires a phased approach. Prioritizing WMS optimization and process standardization before introducing robotics can reduce risk, lower implementation costs, and improve long-term ROI.
Source: www.inboundlogistics.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










