A warehouse automation vendor shortlist checklist
The practical questions operations teams should answer before they shortlist robotics and warehouse automation vendors.
Updated April 12, 2026
Start with the operational constraint
Warehouse automation only pays off when the bottleneck is well understood. Labor variability, peak compression, picking accuracy, storage density, and throughput pressure create very different vendor fits.
Do not start with the robot category. Start with the operational constraint.
Shortlist against site reality
Automation that looks impressive in a greenfield story can be a poor fit for an existing facility with fixed layouts, seasonal demand, and tight implementation windows.
Ask vendors what assumptions their system makes about facility design, process change, and rollout sequencing.
- Facility footprint and retrofit limits
- Peak season implementation risk
- Labor model and training requirements
- Software coordination with WMS and upstream systems
Model operating discipline, not just ROI math
The right shortlist should reflect who will run the system every day, what failure recovery looks like, and how much operational discipline the installation requires after go-live.