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Pillar guide14 min readUpdated 15 avril 2026

Warehousing: warehouses, fulfillment and WMS for modern logistics

From classic central warehouses to multi-client fulfillment platforms – everything shippers and logistics providers need to know about warehousing.

Warehousing is the underrated backbone of every supply chain. To master SKU variety, seasonal peaks and e-commerce service promises, companies need more than space – they need a clean interplay of warehouse strategy, a Warehouse Management System (WMS), processes and people. This pillar guide bundles the key levers – from warehouse types and layouts to KPIs and 3PL partner selection.

Warehouse types
Private, contract, consignment, customs
Top KPIs
OTIF, picking accuracy, cost per unit
WMS market size (2025)
≈ USD 5bn global, CAGR > 15%
E-fulfillment share
20–35% of new EU builds since 2020
Typical 3PL contract
3–7 years

01The main warehouse types at a glance

Warehouses differ in ownership, function and automation level. In practice the dominant types are:

  • Private warehouse: Operated by the shipper, maximum control but high fixed cost.
  • Contract / 3PL warehouse: Logistics service provider operates exclusively or as multi-client. Lever for variable cost.
  • Public warehouse: Short-term space without long-term commitment, often for seasonal peaks.
  • Customs warehouse: Non-cleared goods can be stored, duties and import VAT fall due only upon withdrawal – important for transit, re-export and cashflow.
  • Consignment warehouse: Goods remain the supplier’s property until picked by the customer. Common for JIT and e-commerce fulfillment.
  • Cross-dock / distribution centres: Minimal storage time, focused on consolidation and throughput.

Choice depends on turnover velocity, goods value, regulatory requirements and required service levels. For volatile e-commerce profiles, multi-client 3PL is often the best mix of scalability and cost flexibility.

02Warehouse Management System (WMS): core capabilities

A modern WMS is much more than a digital stock ledger. Expect these core functions:

  • Inbound: ASN matching, QA, dynamic putaway.
  • Inventory: Lot control, serial numbers, BBD/FEFO, real-time multi-location transparency.
  • Order management: Wave planning, priorities, split-pack, mixed B2B/B2C orders.
  • Picking: Pick-by-light/voice/vision, batch and zone picking.
  • Outbound: Carrier rating, label printing, EDI, customs docs, consolidation.
  • Returns: Inspection, refurbishment, BBD check, return-to-stock or write-off.
  • Analytics: Real-time KPIs, heatmaps, slotting suggestions, anomaly detection.

When selecting, weigh integration depth (ERP, TMS, shop, marketplaces), API quality, roadmap and release cadence. Cloud-WMS with multi-tenant architecture dominate new purchases.

03KPIs and control levers for warehouse operations

Professional operations steer with a KPI dashboard that covers quality, productivity and cost:

  • OTIF: Orders on time, in full. B2C benchmark 95–98%, B2B 92–96%.
  • Picking accuracy: Target < 0.1% in automated sites, < 0.5% manual.
  • Inventory accuracy: Target > 99.5% via cycle counting.
  • Cost per unit / cost per order: Fully loaded unit cost.
  • Cube utilisation: Aim 70–85% to leave breathing room for peaks.
  • Dock-to-stock: Time from receiving to available. Target < 4 h.
  • Return rate: Critical in e-commerce profitability.

KPIs only drive decisions when they are available daily and actively reviewed in ops meetings – a gap many operators still face despite powerful WMS tooling.

04Cost structures: understand – and negotiate

Warehousing cost breaks down into five classic blocks:

  1. Space: Rent or ownership cost per sqm or pallet slot. Prime EU logistics locations 2026: EUR 60–120/sqm/year.
  2. Labour: The dominant block (50–65%). Wages plus premiums, leased labour, productivity loss.
  3. Technology & automation: Depreciation on racking, forklifts, sorters, shuttles, robotics.
  4. IT & WMS: Licence + operations, integration cost on system switches.
  5. Energy, security, overhead: Energy inflation since 2022 has hit cold chain and automation hardest.

In 3PL negotiations push for open-book pricing beyond ~5,000 pallets. Gain-share models tying provider margin to KPIs (OTIF, cost per unit) materially improve outcome reliability.

05E-commerce fulfillment: specific requirements

E-commerce fulfillment differs from classic B2B warehousing in several ways:

  • Small orders: 1–3 SKUs on average, but very high order velocity.
  • Cut-off times: Same-day/next-day promises push cut-offs to ~20:00.
  • Returns: 10–50% depending on vertical (fashion up to 50%).
  • Omnichannel integration: Shop, marketplaces, wholesale, stores must share one stock.
  • Customs and IOSS/OSS: Cross-border volume requires IOSS data flows and correct HS codes.

Technologically, goods-to-person (AutoStore, shuttles) has become the default because it minimises picker walks. Mid-size deployments cost EUR 8–30m but amortise within 4–7 years above ~10,000 daily orders.

06How to select the right 3PL

3PL selection is strategic – switching is costly and stresses customer relationships. Proven criteria:

  • Sector expertise: Fashion, pharma, electronics, industrial – each has specifics.
  • Footprint: Geography, port/airport/rail connectivity.
  • Tech stack: WMS ownership, integrations, API docs, release cadence.
  • References: Comparable volume and SKU profile.
  • Financial stability: Rating, equity, insurance cover.
  • Culture: Responsiveness, escalation, willingness to invest.

The RFP process should run in two rounds: qualitative long- to shortlist, then quantitative with standardised inputs. A site audit plus proof-of-concept with real orders is essential before signature.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between central warehouse, regional hub and micro-fulfillment?
A central warehouse serves country- or continent-wide with deep SKU coverage. Regional hubs are decentralised, enable shorter delivery times but carry fewer SKUs – ideal for runners. Micro-fulfillment centres sit in-city (dark stores, store backrooms) and serve same-day / quick-commerce promises. Many companies run hybrid models with one central warehouse as backbone plus 2–5 regional or micro locations.
When does automation start to pay off?
Less about absolute size and more about throughput stability. Volatile volumes and shifting SKU profiles extend payback. Rule of thumb: above 8,000–10,000 orders per day with stable assortment, goods-to-person usually amortises within 5–7 years. For pharma, fashion e-com and grocery, break-even hits earlier.
How do you compute picking accuracy correctly?
Formula: (correct lines / total picked lines) × 100. Exclude downstream catches (scan control, weigh check) to measure the true picker performance. External audits with 500–1,000 sampled lines per month secure data quality.
How does a customs warehouse differ from a normal warehouse?
A customs warehouse stores goods without customs duties or import VAT; both fall due only upon release for free circulation. This improves cash flow, enables re-export without duty and buffers ownership/sourcing risk (e.g. anti-dumping). It requires a customs warehouse authorisation and clean WMS integration with ATLAS (DE), Passar (CH) or local systems.
How do you reduce return rates in e-commerce fulfillment?
Avoidance starts pre-shipment: realistic product imagery (360°, sizing, materials), accurate availability, high-quality picking and protective packaging. In fashion, digital try-on tools cut returns by 3–7 percentage points. On the fulfillment side, clean chain-of-custody, multi-step QA and a lean returns workflow with rapid restock unlock savings.

Topics

warehousingwarehouse managementWMS3PLfulfillmente-commerce fulfillmentcustoms warehouseOTIFpickingorder fulfillment

Further resources