Picking and packing sound like the simplest jobs in the warehouse, which is exactly why they cause so much trouble. They sit at the end of the line, where every earlier mistake finally shows up, and where the customer’s only physical experience of your operation gets decided. Get picking and packing right and the rest of the warehouse looks good. Get it wrong and it doesn’t matter how slick your receiving is, because the customer opens a box with the wrong item in it.
What picking actually involves
Picking is the process of pulling the right items, in the right quantities, for each order. It sounds trivial until you watch it happen at volume. A picker working from a paper list interprets handwriting, invents shortcuts, and makes their worst mistakes at the busiest times, when cognitive load is highest and the queue is longest. Those errors don’t distribute evenly. They cluster around peak, which is precisely when you can least afford them.
How you pick matters as much as whether you pick accurately. Single-order picking is simple but involves a lot of walking. Batch picking groups several orders into one trip. Zone picking assigns each person an area. Cart picking, sometimes called picking and carting, sends a picker round with a multi-tote trolley to collect several orders in a single pass, then sorts them at pack. The right method depends on your order profile, but the common thread is cutting the distance people walk, because in most warehouses travel time, not picking time, is the real bottleneck.
What packing actually involves
Packing is where the order gets checked, protected and prepared for despatch. The packer confirms the contents match the order, chooses packaging that survives the carrier network, and generates the label. It’s also your last chance to catch a picking error before it becomes a return, a refund and a lost customer. A pack station that verifies as it works is worth far more than one that simply boxes whatever arrives.
Packaging choice isn’t just about protection either. Oversized boxes waste material and inflate carrier costs, since most carriers bill on volumetric weight. Right-sizing the box to the order is a quiet, ongoing saving that adds up across thousands of parcels.
Why picking and packing decide customer loyalty
The stakes here are higher than they look. Research by Voxware found that 69% of customers are less likely to shop with a retailer again if an item doesn’t arrive within the promised window. A wrong or late item isn’t a one-off cost. It’s a returned parcel, a refund, a re-ship, and a customer who quietly takes their next order elsewhere. Accuracy and speed at pick and pack are what protect the relationship, not just the margin on that single order.
How to get picking and packing right
The improvements that actually move the needle are less glamorous than “embrace automation” and more specific:
- Verify at the point of contact. Scan verification stops the packer if the barcode doesn’t match the order, so the wrong item never leaves the building. It targets around 99.9% pick accuracy, against the 97 to 98% typical of manual pick lists. That difference is the gap between happy customers and a returns pile.
- Cut the walking, not the corners. Wave picking batches orders and optimises the route so pickers cover less ground. Clarus’s smart wave picking is built to cut travel time by roughly half, which is where most picking productivity actually hides.
- Give people real tools. Handheld scanners with a workflow built for your process beat a clipboard every time, because they remove interpretation and capture data as the work happens.
- Right-size the packaging. Match the box to the order to protect the goods and keep volumetric carrier charges down.
- Review the data, not just the vibe. Pick rates, error rates and pack times per person and per zone tell you where to focus. Continuous improvement needs numbers, not hunches.
Worth being honest about one thing: software amplifies the process underneath it. A WMS won’t rescue weak labelling discipline or a badly slotted warehouse. It makes a good process faster and a bad one faster to fail. Fix the fundamentals first, then let the system scale them.
Done well, the results compound. KATEM Logistics scaled their monthly picking volumes tenfold after moving to Clarus, without the operation buckling, and JODA Freight pushed stock accuracy from the low 90s to 99.8%, which is what makes a pick list worth trusting in the first place.
Speak to a warehouse expert
If your picking and packing is where errors and delays creep in, it’s worth seeing how a purpose-built WMS handles it in practice. We work with 3PLs and distributors across the UK to tighten up scan-verified picking and packing without slowing the floor down.
Get in touch with our team to talk through your requirements.