As warehouses and fulfilment operations continue handling higher order volumes, many businesses face the same challenge: improving picking accuracy without continuously increasing manpower.
Hiring more workers may provide short-term relief, but it does not always solve the underlying operational inefficiencies. In fact, as warehouses grow larger and SKU counts increase, maintaining accuracy through purely manual processes becomes increasingly difficult.
This is why many modern warehouses are turning to Pick-to-Light (PTL) systems to improve operational performance without significantly expanding headcount.
Why Picking Accuracy Matters More Than Ever
In warehouse operations, even small picking errors can create major downstream problems.
Incorrect shipments lead to returns, repacking costs, delayed deliveries, inventory discrepancies, and customer dissatisfaction. As fulfilment expectations become faster and more demanding, businesses can no longer rely heavily on paper-based processes or manual memory to maintain accuracy.
The challenge becomes even greater in high-SKU environments where workers must manage thousands of similar-looking products under time pressure. Warehouses handling e-commerce, retail replenishment, spare parts, pharmaceuticals, or consumer goods frequently experience these challenges as operations scale.
At the same time, increasing labour alone is often not sustainable. Rising wage costs and labour shortages across the logistics sector have pushed many operators to look for smarter ways to improve productivity.
When an order is released through the warehouse management system, the correct pick locations illuminate automatically and display the quantity required. Operators simply follow the lights, pick the indicated quantity, and confirm the task through a button press or sensor confirmation.
Instead of relying on paper pick lists or constantly checking handheld devices, workers receive immediate visual guidance directly at the storage location. This creates a faster and more intuitive picking process with significantly fewer opportunities for human error.
One of the biggest advantages of Pick-to-Light systems is their ability to reduce cognitive load on warehouse operators.
Traditional picking methods often require workers to read instructions, search for locations, verify item codes, and manually confirm quantities while moving quickly through the warehouse. As order complexity increases, mistakes naturally become more common. Pick-to-Light simplifies this process by visually guiding operators directly to the correct location. The illuminated display removes guesswork and reduces the risk of selecting the wrong item.
The quantity display also helps minimise under-picking and over-picking, particularly for fast-moving or small-sized products where manual counting errors can occur frequently.
Many systems additionally require confirmation before the next pick is activated, creating a closed-loop process that further improves accuracy.
Beyond accuracy, Pick-to-Light systems also improve picking speed. Because operators spend less time reading instructions or searching for locations, picking becomes significantly faster and more consistent. Industry studies show that Pick-to-Light systems can improve productivity by 30% to 50% in suitable warehouse environments.
This productivity improvement allows businesses to process higher order volumes using the same workforce rather than continuously expanding headcount during growth periods.
For warehouses struggling with labour availability, this becomes a major operational advantage. Rather than replacing workers entirely, Pick-to-Light systems help existing teams work more efficiently while reducing fatigue and repetitive decision-making.
Training new warehouse workers can be time-consuming, especially during peak seasons where temporary labour is heavily relied upon.
Because Pick-to-Light systems are visually intuitive, new operators can typically become productive much faster compared to traditional paper-based or RF-scanner workflows. Workers do not need to memorise warehouse layouts or spend excessive time learning complex picking procedures. Instead, the system guides them directly through the process.
This shorter learning curve helps warehouses maintain operational consistency even when onboarding temporary or seasonal staff.
Pick-to-Light systems are especially valuable in high-SKU warehouses where traditional manual picking becomes increasingly difficult to manage accurately. As SKU counts increase, operators often spend more time searching, verifying, and double-checking products. Similar-looking items stored close together further increase the risk of picking errors.
By simplifying item identification through direct visual instruction, Pick-to-Light systems allow warehouses to maintain high throughput while keeping error rates low. Many operations also integrate Pick-to-Light systems with batch picking, sorting walls, conveyors, and warehouse management systems to further streamline fulfilment workflows.
Here’s our two-cents
As warehouse operations continue evolving, improving productivity is no longer only about increasing manpower. It is about building smarter workflows that allow existing teams to operate more efficiently and accurately.
Pick-to-Light systems provide a practical and scalable way to achieve this balance. By combining visual guidance, real-time system integration, and intuitive workflows, businesses can improve picking accuracy, increase throughput, and reduce operational strain without continuously adding labour. We at Factronics can help growing warehouses facing increasing fulfilment demands implement technologies like these for long-term scalability.
Based in Singapore, Factronics Systems Engineering Pte Ltd offers expert Factory Automation (FA) solutions. With branches in Malaysia and Thailand, we provide end-to-end services including design, supply, installation, and maintenance of advanced FA systems.
Posted by Factronics Systems Engineering Pte Ltd on 9 Jun 26
Singapore