The Result
Since Valley has rolled out the My Valley Website, it has been a huge advantage for Valley customers who have loved it. Said Jeremy Smith, CFO, “We've been able to enroll more customers utilizing VAI eCommerce for ordering. The pictures and order and quantity availability have been critical and key for them to see. They still get the Valley touch, and we still have the human interaction, but it provides another avenue for them to get their orders more quickly to us which we can process faster for them.”
Valley takes orders through a combination of VAI’s e-commerce technology and customers calling in. Those have a cutoff of one o'clock pm. For a certain part of the day, Valley pulls orders in through RoadNet/Omnitracs, which is its routing management software. RoadNet/Omnitracs is to plan and optimize truck delivery routes. At about 3:30, Valley begins batching routes. “We have built certain trailers by cubes and weight. That'll control how VAI software builds the units of work when we process the batches. From there, we can process or not process as many times as we want, until we get the truck we want,” said Mike Smith, IT Network Administrator.
Valley can choose which trailer to batch with by using a screen that shows an overview of pounds and cubes. The units are then sent to work at the warehouse where they are marked. At the item location, the picking quantity is calculated and confirmed. Should Valley choose to reduce the amount, they might simply press a function key, perform a short, and declare that it's gone.
"We have an automated shorting process which will generate a short unit of work automatically and then the manager can review the short, see if we have it here, and then assign it to somebody to go and pick it," Mike Smith explained. Like short chasing, they have two options: either they go find the pallet or case, pick it up, and load it onto the truck, or it gets shorted and appears on the short report.
Together, Valley and VAI developed a software program with Valley's third-party logistics partner to manage the transit and storage, including inbound receipt, billing, and storage renewals. In terms of transit, Valley handled order creation or backorders for the transit line and billed those out; this was a smooth procedure. The Valley and VAI team also developed a web portal for third-party logistics customers to see their stock at tall times, which is crucial given the sensitive nature of some of their products and/or the volume of inventory they can transport to clients.
Valley runs its VAI ERP on the IBM® Power® Systems, which offers strong security as well as superior virtualization and management tools for flexibility and a clear TCO advantage for a business. IBM Power is also renowned for its performance and scalability even under the most taxing workloads. “We really like the IBM Power System,” said Shane Polakowski, IT Manager. “It's stable, secure, and easy to pull data from the system.”
Valley is excited about the future with VAI and with their system in place, look ahead to what’s coming next from VAI to help their business in the future.
Since the launch, Valley Cooperative has been using VAI’s ERP software to:
- Leverage VAI Mobile for customer convenience
- Enroll more customers with VAI eCommerce
- Increase warehouse picker productivity with VAI Analytics
- Strong, secure, reliable computing with IBM Power Systems server