UPS's $20 Billion Problem : Operations Stuck in the 20th Century

cheryl

I started this.
Staff member
UPS's $20 Billion Problem : Operations Stuck in the 20th Century - 4 Traders

In the sticky Southern heat, hundreds of workers streamed in for the 11 a.m. shift last month at United Parcel Service Inc.'s local package-sorting facility, one of dozens nationwide that help it move millions of parcels daily.

In a windowless room, a 30-year-old analog control panel about the size of a chest freezer monitors operations, with rows of green and red lights indicating when something goes awry in the building's web of conveyor belts.

"Thirty years ago, this was top-notch," UPS plant engineering manager Dean Britt said of the control panel. Today, the panel's computing capabilities "can probably fit on your phone," he said, "and not even a good phone."

The site, and other similar UPS facilities, haven't automated much over decades -- despite a rush of new warehouse technology in many industries. Today, the company is paying a price.
 

DriverNerd

Well-Known Member
If it's new at UPS, it's automated. If it's old and still works, UPS isn't gonna touch it. That's the way it's always been. If they're not gonna make more money by doing it (except for ORION) they won't.

And as said above - blame the teamsters.
 

oldngray

nowhere special
Why replace equipment that works just because its old and not as sexy as newer high tech that doesn't do the job any better? Maybe for new construction but not cost effective to retrofit every older building.
 

eats packages

Deranged lunatic
Also funny to note that the new hub in this article only cuts the workforce down to %75 of what the older hub uses. There must be a lot of people hired to "pick up packages which fall off the belt"
 

olroadbeech

Happy Verified UPSer
IBM made the same mistake. They got so big that new innovations were too slow in coming and a couple young guys started companies and took over from Big Blue.

I see Amazon or some now unknown company doing the same thing within the next 5-10 years if UPS doesn't wake up.

It's the nature of business.
 
Top