Published: 01 August 2022
Summary
Choose the right WMS by using the highlighted nine critical capabilities across five different use cases to appropriately align with your levels of operational complexity and sophistication. Supply chain technology leaders can use this research to compare specific WMS products.
Included in Full Research
Overview
Key Findings
Innovation continues to distinguish warehouse management system (WMS) offerings. New capabilities are emerging, such as advanced analytics and machine learning, employee engagement, and robotics integration. Other capabilities are maturing, such as usability, composability, implementation tools and material handling automation support.
The polar opposite extremes of WMS support for the simplest Level 1 and the most complex and automated Level 5 use cases contrast vendors and solutions dramatically.
WMS technical architecture has become a more important consideration for new WMS buyers who seek flexibility, adaptability, composability, usability and affordability.
Recommendations
Supply chain technology leaders responsible for selection of warehouse management solutionsfor supply chain
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Strategic Planning Assumptions
- Blue Yonder
- Ehrhardt Partner Group (EPG)
- Generix Group (Generix WMS)
- Generix Group (SOLOCHAIN)
- Infor
- Körber (K.Motion Warehouse Advantage)
- Körber (K.Motion Warehouse Edge)
- Made4net
- Manhattan Associates (Manhattan Active WM)
- Manhattan Associates (SCALE)
- Mantis
- Mecalux
- Oracle
- Reply
- SAP
- Softeon
- SSI SCHAEFER
- Synergy Logistics
- Tecsys
- Vinculum
- Core WMS
- Extended WMS
- Usability
- Analytics/BI
- Implementation Tools
- Adaptability
- Supporting Technologies
- Material Handling Integration
- Simplicity
- Level 1 Warehouse Operation
- Level 2 Warehouse Operation
- Level 3 Warehouse Operation
- Level 4 Warehouse Operation
- Level 5 Warehouse Operation
Gartner Recommended Reading
Critical Capabilities Methodology