The Future Of Warehouse Inventory Is Flying | Fast Five Shorts

This Omni Talk Retail Fast Five segment, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, Quorso, and Veloq, explores Kroger’s use of autonomous drones inside sub freezing distribution centers.
Chris Walton and Jenn Hahn discuss how drone technology could transform warehouse inventory management and eliminate some of the most difficult cold chain tasks.
⏩ Tune in for the full episode here.
#RetailNews #Kroger #WarehouseAutomation #RetailLogistics #SupplyChain #OmniTalk #RetailFastFive
And we are going back to Kroger, Chris.
Speaker AWe're going back to Kroger because this time Kroger has deployed autonomous inventory drones from Corvus Robotics into its cold chain distribution operations, sending them into sub freezing freezer environments to conduct cycle counts that used to require humans to bundle up and walk the aisles.
Speaker AAccording to Supply Chain dive, the drones, aka Corvus 1 for cold chain is what they're calling them, autonomously scan pallet locations across freezer zones at temperatures as low as -20 degrees Fahrenheit, giving Kroger weekly inventory visibility across its facilities instead of relying on periodic full physical counts.
Speaker AThe system operates without WI FI localization markers, lighting modifications, special barcodes, or a human operator, and does not require any infrastructure modifications to the existing warehouses, which I think matters.
Speaker AIt runs on a robots as service model.
Speaker ASo, Chris, I hear you've spent time in freezers back in your target days.
Speaker AWhat do you think of using drones to surveil cold chain inventory?
Speaker BOh, geez.
Speaker BYes, Jen, I definitely, I definitely have spent time in, in, in freezers and you know, I'm going to drop another acronym because of the Corvus.
Speaker BThe cocc, I think, was the acronym you said.
Speaker BYeah, so, but, but yes, I have been in freezers and I, you know, it's funny, as I was thinking about this headline, I used to always say that price changes was the worst job in retail.
Speaker BThat's actually not true, Jen.
Speaker BI probably, I bet you know this too.
Speaker BThe worst job is actually doing anything in the freezer because you can literally die if you get stuck in there too long.
Speaker BAnd there's usually a story every year, no joke about something that gets stuck in a freezer and dies at some retail operation in the United States.
Speaker BKind of morbid, but, but kind of true.
Speaker BSo there's nothing more worse than, and awful than having to go into a freezer and, and, and in.
Speaker BOn top of that, there's going into the freezer quickly to get something and then there's having to be in the freezer to do inventory counting in a cold environment like this.
Speaker BSo, so I think this is a smart application of drone technology.
Speaker BYou don't have to worry about drones flying overhead of consumers.
Speaker BYou can also get pretty good camera coverage as well relative to fixed position 6 systems.
Speaker BSo it seems like a win win application to me to improve inventory accuracy and availability, which helps the consumer at the end of the day and it keeps your employees safe and out of the freezer, which I'm sure they are going to love.
Speaker BJen, what do you think?
Speaker AYes, Michigan in March.
Speaker AI'm ready for warm temperatures and staying out of the freezer myself.
Speaker ABut no, I. I agree with you here.
Speaker AI don't see any issues with this.
Speaker AIt's all upside down.
Speaker AFrom my experience and what I understand, I also remember being in the freezer to count inventory.
Speaker AAnd by the time you're at the back of the freezer, who knows if it's chicken wings or chicken legs.
Speaker AIt's something like that.
Speaker ABut let's get the heck out of here, right?
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker ACounting inventory in the freezer cannot be accurate.
Speaker AI've been there, done it.
Speaker ATakes a special kind of resilience.
Speaker AYou know, even today when our clients are interviewing for warehouse or distribution leadership, they're still in that way.
Speaker AAnd maybe you remember this, Chris, from your days in ops.
Speaker AThey still take candidates through a walk through the freezer just to see if they can hang.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ALike, oh, and you'll spend some time in here.
Speaker ASo it's sort of a part of the industry that I don't think anyone would hate to lose.
Speaker AAnd cutting out some of those extreme cold temperatures for employees and leaders is just going to increase, uh, the accuracy of their inventory as well as create some added perks for those.
Speaker AYou know, that's not their favorite part of their day.
Speaker AIt's not the favorite part of their job.
Speaker ASo definitely no downsides here for me.
Speaker AI like this use.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BA hundred percent.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BA hundred percent.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, anytime you have to give somebody a jacket to do their job, you know, it's kind of like, yeah, this.
Speaker BProbably not.
Speaker BProbably not.
Speaker BThe best thing I want to be doing on a daily basis is going inside a freezer if it's going to require.
Speaker AYeah, I remember it was like, hey, and you get this jacket.
Speaker ALike, it was a reward.
Speaker AAnd you felt really special.
Speaker AAnd initially.
Speaker AAnd then you were like, I hate this jacket.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BFingers anymore, right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI wish I never had to feel
Speaker Bmy face when I'm with you.
Speaker BIt reminds me of that song.
Speaker BBut, yeah, that's, like, exactly what it is.
Speaker BYou know, it's just.
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's a terrible job.





