As warehouse operations evolve amid mounting pressures for speed, accuracy, and adaptability, understanding operational complexity is the key for building an effective warehouse management system (WMS) strategy. In its latest report, Use the 10 Dimensions of Warehouse Complexity Before Selecting a WMS,” Gartner provides a practical framework to help supply chain leaders evaluate the nuanced challenges within their warehouse networks and define the right WMS requirements accordingly.

Companies often mistake square footage or industry vertical for the main driver of operational demand. However, Gartner emphasizes that work practices, throughput, constraints, and adaptability can significantly influence the complexity and sophistication required in a WMS.

Figure 2 Gartner WMS Stratification Model 1

The 10 Dimensions

Gartner identifies 10 dimensions that affect warehouse complexity, including:

  • Warehouse size and layout: A small facility with a highly dynamic layout can be more complex than a massive bulk-pick operation.
  • Volume and types of work: Facilities handling high-frequency, mixed-unit orders (like in e-commerce or service parts) often face significant complexity.
  • Product characteristics: Managing temperature-sensitive, hazardous, or customer-owned inventory adds layers of governance and handling protocols.
  • Cycle time requirements: Facilities with tight service-level agreements or rapid order cycles require more robust task orchestration tools.
  • Automation and adaptability: Integration with robotics, conveyor systems, and AMRs, plus the need to rapidly adapt workflows, drives the need for scalable,  WMS platforms.

For multisite operators, Gartner recommends grading individual facilities using this model to inform a tiered or hybrid WMS deployment strategy, avoiding a one-size-fits-all approach.

Complexity Should Drive System Selection

According to Gartner, failing to align WMS functionality with operational complexity leads to one of two pitfalls: overspending on an overly sophisticated system, or underperforming due to limited capabilities.

Gartner

Complexity should directly inform not only RFP requirements, but also WMS vendor evaluation, demo scenarios, and implementation roadmaps.

Gartner also points out that the ability to adapt to change is becoming a major complexity driver, especially in industries experiencing rapid growth, labor variability, or acquisition-driven expansion. WMS solutions built on service-oriented or microservices-based architectures are best positioned to meet these demands.

Softeon: Purpose-Built for Complexity and Change

At Softeon, we understand that no two warehouses are alike and that complexity doesn’t have to be a burden. Our WMS is designed to flex across the entire spectrum of complexity outlined in Gartner’s model. From Level 1 environments requiring streamlined usability to Level 5 facilities with advanced automation, we provide a single platform that scales and adapts with your needs.

What sets us apart? Softeon’s architecture embraces configurability without custom code, deep integration with material handling systems, and powerful tools for task interleaving, labor management, and automation orchestration. That means you don’t need to choose between simplicity and depth, because with Softeon, you get both.

If you’re assessing your WMS strategy and looking to align your capabilities with the unique complexities of your operations, start with Gartner’s framework and finish with Softeon.

Reach out to Softeon to walk through the Gartner research together and learn how our WMS and WES solutions can help you streamline operations, scale efficiently, and unlock limitless automation.

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