Distributors handling building materials know one truth better than most: not all products play by the same rules. Long-length lumber. Palletized cement. Small, high-value fasteners. Bulky insulation rolls. Each SKU has its own ideal handling and storage setup — and a one-size-fits-all layout will cost you in time, space, and safety.
But optimizing your layout isn’t just about walking the floor and shifting racks. It starts with data — and the right KPIs.
Here’s what to measure to make smarter layout decisions, especially in warehouses that store a wide variety of product shapes, sizes, and handling requirements.
- SKU Velocity by Size and Category
Why it matters:
High-turn SKUs deserve the most accessible locations — but that looks very different for a pallet of fasteners vs. a bundle of conduit.
What to track:
Units picked per SKU, per week/month
Total cubic volume moved
Velocity classification (A/B/C) segmented by product type or handling method
Use it to:
Prioritize high-turn SKUs near shipping zones
Place large-but-slow SKUs in high-capacity zones
Reduce congestion around fast-movers
- Space Utilization Rate (Per Zone)
Why it matters:
Wasted vertical or floor space means lower ROI per square foot.
What to measure:
Bin/rack capacity vs. actual stock volume
Ground stacking density
Overhead clearance usage in racked zones
Use it to:
Identify underused areas that can be reconfigured
Justify new racking where vertical space is being wasted
Consolidate slow-movers into deeper storage formats
- Pick Path Efficiency
Why it matters:
Poor layout = longer walks, more forklift hours, and wasted motion.
How to track it:
Average distance per pick (in feet or time)
Number of stops per pick list
Picker idle time or path overlap
Optimize by:
Grouping frequently picked SKUs near shipping lanes
Re-sequencing pick zones to reduce backtracking
Positioning oversized items near staging to avoid double handling
- Handling Method per SKU
Why it matters:
Lumping small parts and heavy bulk goods into the same area causes congestion and safety issues.
Track via ERP metadata:
Forklift-only vs. manual-pick SKUs
Long-load vs. palletized vs. bin stock
Equipment needed per zone (e.g., side-loaders, carts, lifts)
Use this data to:
Segregate incompatible product types
Design dedicated aisles for oversized or long items
Ensure equipment can operate safely in each zone
- Zone-Level Dwell Time
Why it matters:
If materials sit too long in high-traffic zones, you’re blocking fast movers and wasting prime real estate.
What to measure:
Time SKUs remain in a zone without movement
Inbound-to-pick dwell by SKU type
Frequency of location reassignment or overflow use
Use it to:
Shift slow movers to secondary storage
Free up front-line space for seasonally high-turn SKUs
Prevent staging zones from becoming unplanned long-term storage
- Stock Consolidation Opportunities
Why it matters:
Storing partial pallets, excess bundles, or mixed lots across several locations makes picking slower and space usage inefficient.
Track with ERP tools:
SKUs with <50% bin capacity
Same SKU spread across multiple zones
SKUs with recurring location transfers or splits
Use it to:
Consolidate into fewer, fuller bins
Clean up misallocated zones
Prep layout for seasonal inbound volumes
- Staging Zone Throughput and Blockage Rates
Why it matters:
No matter how efficient your storage is, a clogged staging area will slow down the entire operation.
What to monitor:
Number of orders staged per hour/day
Dwell time in staging (time between pick complete and loadout)
Frequency of staging area overflow or mix-ups
Fix it by:
Expanding staging space near docks for large/long goods
Rotating staging zones by delivery route or truck size
Adding visual staging lanes tied to ERP shipment IDs
- Safety Incident Rates by Zone Type
Why it matters:
Cramped layouts or improper SKU placement often lead to safety risks — especially with forklifts and long materials.
What to track:
Near misses or equipment strikes per area
Load shift or tip events
Incidents involving oversized SKU handling
Use it to:
Reconfigure high-risk aisles
Add clear markings or traffic flow signage
Train teams on safe access procedures by zone
Final Thoughts
Optimizing a mixed-SKU warehouse layout isn’t just about moving racks around — it’s about using data to shape space intentionally. The right KPIs help you improve safety, speed, and scalability across a complex product mix — all while getting more value out of every square foot.
Measure what matters, move what’s necessary — and let your layout work for you, not against you.