Ignoring slow-moving items isn’t just an oversight, it’s a missed opportunity to improve profitability and performance. Find out why and what you can do to optimize your less-popular inventory.
In warehouse management, the 80/20 rule, also known as the Pareto Principle is a widely accepted truth: roughly 20% of SKUs drive 80% of throughput. These "A-movers" are the lifeblood of fulfillment operations and are typically given prime real estate in the facility. But what about the remaining 80% of SKUs? These B- and C-movers may not be fast-moving, but they’re often the largest contributors to warehouse complexity, cost, and inefficiency.
While A-movers get optimized storage, automation support, and consistent attention, the slower-moving 80% of SKUs are frequently stored inefficiently, scattered across the facility, shelved in difficult-to-access areas, stashed in upper levels of pick modules, or simply left unmanaged in long-term storage zones. This can lead to a variety of challenges:
Certain industries are inherently prone to large slow-moving SKU catalogs due to the nature of their products and service models:
In today’s economy, consumers expect personalization and choice. This trend, fueled by e-commerce, has led to explosive SKU proliferation. A brand may once have offered five options; now it’s 50, or even 500. Whether it’s a variety of finishes for cabinet hardware, colors of reusable water bottles, or trims for kitchen appliances, more choice equals more complexity.
As SKU counts balloon, the Pareto curve steepens: the top 10-20% of SKUs generate more and more of the throughput, while the rest clog up warehouse space.
When it comes to managing slow-moving SKUs, few solutions rival the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of AutoStore. Unlike traditional racking or even other automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS), AutoStore is uniquely designed to maximize space utilization while minimizing the cost of storing inventory that moves infrequently.
Here’s how AutoStore helps optimize the long tail:
AutoStore’s cube-based design enables the highest storage density of any AS/RS on the market — up to 4x more bins per square foot than traditional shelving or racking. This makes it the ideal solution for consolidating long-tail SKUs into a compact footprint, freeing up valuable warehouse space for faster-moving inventory or other operations.
Unlike most AS/RS platforms where each SKU stored comes with a proportional cost (due to shuttles, lifts, or fixed-position robotics), AutoStore's cost structure works in favor of long-tail SKU management:
Most warehousing distributors don’t realize that they are spending the majority of their cost per square foot leasing space for inventory that barely moves. The A-movers, the 20% that drive 80% of revenue, typically take up far less space. It’s the long tail that eats up real estate. By consolidating these SKUs into a high-density AutoStore grid, companies can drastically reduce their physical footprint, lower lease costs, and make every square foot work harder.
Even if a SKU is only picked once every few months, AutoStore robots can retrieve it just as easily as a high-velocity item. There’s no penalty in labor or time when accessing long-tail products. Every bin is accessible, and bin location doesn’t impact retrieval complexity, something traditional AS/RS systems and manual operations can’t say.
As SKU proliferation continues, adding new bins and expanding the grid is simple and non-disruptive with AutoStore. You don’t need to overbuild or reconfigure entire systems. This flexibility is critical as long-tail inventory grows due to market expansion or consumer demand for customization.
By leveraging AutoStore for slow-moving SKUs, distribution operations can turn what was once a cost center into a model of efficiency. Rather than letting the long tail drag down warehouse performance, forward-thinking operators are using AutoStore to rein it in — densely, affordably, and smartly.