Remove Course Remove Knowledge Base Remove Sorting
article thumbnail

Understanding Reverse Logistics: Turning Challenges into Opportunities

Log-hub

Furthermore, the process involves sorting, inspecting, and determining the best course of action for each item, which demands significant time and effort. More resources are waiting for you in our Knowledge base. Lack of Visibility Tracking returned products throughout the reverse supply chain remains a common issue.

article thumbnail

Gemba Process Innovation Can Drive Wave in Europe

Logistics Business Magazine

In logistics, it can provide the ability to sort, schedule, track and monitor the condition of goods using Deep Learning and sensor technologies connected via the Internet of Things. Of course, technology alone cannot solve these challenges. Examples include the deployment of Panasonic’s Visual Sort Assist System (VSA).

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How AI Helps Build the Supply Chain that Thinks for Itself

Logistics Bureau

Of course, it can also open new opportunities for tomorrow. Create a knowledge base that new workers can access, and based on the knowhow of older workers, as in the Campbell Soup Company example. It can’t think outside the box, but it can flag errors and anomalies for a person to then sort out.

article thumbnail

6 Supply Chain Trends That Could Truly Shake You Up (2018 Update)

Logistics Bureau

Municipalities in many countries feed that fashion by encouraging waste sorting and offering citizens chances to demonstrate their concern for the environment. Being ecologically friendly is ethically desirable—and even fashionable in the eyes of today’s consumers.