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Get more from your fleet: How AI can unlock hidden efficiency in material handling

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Fleet optimization used to be about keeping equipment running and minimizing downtime. Today, artificial intelligence can help warehouses get far more value from their fleets by identifying hidden inefficiencies and supporting faster, smarter decisions across the operation.

Whether you’re managing forklifts, autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), or conveyors across one site or several, AI is changing how these assets are tracked, maintained, and allocated. With leasing costs rising and operational budgets under pressure, underused or mismanaged equipment isn’t just inefficient — it’s expensive. AI-powered platforms can help supply chain leaders tackle that problem with real-time visibility and predictive insight.

Spot underused equipment before it hits your bottom line

One of the most persistent hidden costs in material handling is leased equipment that is underutilized. A forklift that sits idle for most of a shift, or a fleet of AMRs that only reach peak productivity during high season, can quietly drive up costs without triggering alarms.

AI-driven fleet analytics help solve this by continuously monitoring asset utilization across the network. These systems analyze telemetry data, operator patterns, and historical usage to identify underused equipment in real time. They can flag when a leased unit is trending toward underperformance weeks before a financial penalty is triggered.

That gives you time to make a better decision. Maybe the unit can be reallocated to a busier site. Perhaps the lease can be renegotiated or terminated early. In some cases, it’s simply a matter of retraining staff or adjusting shift planning to improve usage. Whatever the action, it starts with visibility… and that’s what AI provides.

Prevent breakdowns with more innovative maintenance scheduling

Unplanned maintenance is one of the most disruptive — and expensive — events in warehouse operations. It doesn’t just cost time and parts. It throws off labor planning, slows throughput, and can lead to missed service levels.

Many operations still rely on reactive or calendar-based maintenance schedules. These methods assume all assets degrade at the same rate, regardless of how, where, or how often they’re used.

AI changes that. By continuously learning from sensor data, operating conditions, and maintenance history, intelligent systems can build a dynamic profile for each asset. They can predict when parts are likely to fail or when performance is beginning to drop, not based on generic intervals, but on how that asset is actually being used.

This predictive approach allows teams to service equipment just before issues arise, rather than waiting for failures or over-servicing unnecessarily. It also improves inventory management for spare parts and reduces overtime spent on emergency fixes. The result is more uptime, less guesswork, and lower cost of ownership over time.

Don’t just track your fleet… learn from it

Capturing data is only the first step. What matters is how that data drives decisions.

AI helps teams move from descriptive reporting to predictive and prescriptive insight. It highlights patterns you might miss, such as chronic underuse, slowdowns before a failure, or load imbalances across facilities. More importantly, it suggests actions based on those insights.

More innovative fleet management isn’t just about reducing costs. It’s about unlocking agility, improving asset longevity, and supporting operational decisions that align with business goals.

As warehouses get smarter, fleets will too. And with AI, the equipment you already have might be the key to doing more — without spending more.

About the Author

Vee Srithayakumar is a product leader in warehouse management at Tecsys, driving innovation through AI-driven and advanced warehouse execution system initiatives. His contributions to the supply chain industry earned him recognition as a 2024 Supply & Demand Chain Executive “Pros to Know.”

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