List of Witron WMS Customers
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Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying Witron WMS customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased Witron WMS for Warehouse Management from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using Witron WMS for Warehouse Management include: Ahold Delhaize, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 390000 employees and revenues of $120.90 billion, Sobeys Canada, a Canada based Retail organisation with 128000 employees and revenues of $22.13 billion, Metro, a Canada based Retail organisation with 97870 employees and revenues of $15.36 billion, Hema BV, a Netherlands based Retail organisation with 17000 employees and revenues of $4.25 billion and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using Witron WMS, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the SCM software purchases.
The Witron WMS customer wins are being incorporated in our Enterprise Applications Buyer Insight and Technographics Customer Database which has over 100 data fields that detail company usage of SCM software systems and their digital transformation initiatives. Apps Run The World wants to become your No. 1 technographic data source!
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| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
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Ahold Delhaize | Retail | 390000 | $120.9B | Netherlands | Witron | Witron WMS | Warehouse Management | 2008 | n/a |
In 2008, Ahold Delhaize Netherlands implemented Witron WMS, deploying the Witron WMS as its Warehouse Management solution for a fresh mechanized distribution environment. The implementation emphasized mechanized material flow and warehouse automation integration for fresh goods, configuring inventory control, order fulfillment, picking, and replenishment workflows consistent with Warehouse Management capabilities. The deployment aligned warehouse control and automation interfaces with operational process controls at the mechanized fresh warehouse.
The program integrated the Witron WMS into Ahold Delhaize Netherlands existing applications landscape through more than 80 interfaces and required approximately 3500 man days for configuration, interface development, system testing, and cutover activities. Integrations connected automation and control layers to enterprise processes supporting warehouse operations, distribution, and replenishment at the fresh site, with operational coverage focused on the mechanized distribution center. Governance emphasized structured interface validation, end-to-end testing, and operational handover to warehouse operations and logistics teams.
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Hema BV | Retail | 17000 | $4.3B | Netherlands | Witron | Witron WMS | Warehouse Management | 2007 | n/a |
In 2007, Hema BV implemented Witron WMS to extend warehouse control across its merchandising flows. Hema BV had been operating the Witron DPS Dynamic Picking System for regular merchandise picks to support replenishment to approximately 340 HEMA stores across the Low Countries and Germany.
The deployment uses the Witron WMS Warehouse Management capabilities to orchestrate dynamic picking for the pull merchandise range while configuring the same logistical infrastructure to support push distribution for promotional, seasonal and specially offered goods. Functional configurations emphasized inventory segmentation, staging and pick sequencing to separate pull on demand store replenishment from push shipments delivered independently from store orders.
Operational scope centers on central distribution centers running Witron WMS and the outbound supply chain feeding retail locations, with business functions impacted including warehousing, distribution, store replenishment planning and logistics operations. The pull range remains ordered on demand by nearby stores, while the push range is fulfilled by scheduled distributions configured within the WMS to operate independently from store orders.
Governance and workflow changes focused on building parallel fulfillment rules inside Witron WMS to segregate inventory and execution logic for pull versus push assortments, and on repurposing the DPS picking infrastructure to handle promotional logistics alongside regular merchandise. The implementation positioned Witron WMS as the central Warehouse Management control layer for both on demand replenishment and scheduled push deliveries.
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Metro | Retail | 97870 | $15.4B | Canada | Witron | Witron WMS | Warehouse Management | 2016 | n/a |
In 2016, Metro implemented Witron WMS as a core Warehouse Management application to orchestrate distribution center work streams at its Etobicoke site. The deployment focused on operational execution within the Distribution Centre and embedded the Witron WMS application into day to day shipping and receiving workflows.
Configuration centered on work unit orchestration inside Witron WMS, with operators and coordinators performing data entry to assign work units to forklifts, selectors, loaders and receivers. Functional coverage included purchase order processing, receiving reports, inventory reporting and outbound invoice coordination, reflecting typical Warehouse Management capabilities such as task allocation, inventory transaction capture and labor assignment.
The Witron WMS implementation operated alongside named operational systems, with data entry and coordination linked to EMDECS, SMS TMS and C3 scheduling software to monitor, prioritize and route outbound shipping and receiving orders. Operational scope extended beyond warehouse floor tasks to truck yard traffic control and coordination with Transportation, Replenishment and Store teams, showing integrated execution across inbound, internal, and outbound logistics.
Governance and process changes were driven through roles such as Shipping and Receiving Coordinator, with explicit responsibilities for OSHA compliance, supervision of unionized staff, and coordination of internal customers including Leadership, HR and Safety. The rollout emphasized procedural control over purchase order and inventory workflows and created explicit channels for continuous improvement suggestions to reduce waste and additional handling in the Distribution Centre.
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Sobeys Canada | Retail | 128000 | $22.1B | Canada | Witron | Witron WMS | Warehouse Management | 2014 | n/a |
In 2014, Sobeys Canada implemented Witron WMS as a Warehouse Management deployment tied to two warehouse automation projects in Vaughan, Ontario and Terrebonne, Quebec. The 2014 contract extended an existing dry-grocery facility by adding a fully automated case-picking system for fresh and frozen goods within an approximately 245,000 square foot extension, with productive use targeted for autumn 2016 and the extension planned to supply 783 stores with frozen goods and 829 stores with perishables.
WITRON implemented two principal modules into the Sobeys distribution-centre extension, the Case-Picking System CPS and the Order-Picking Machinery OPM, both operating under the Witron WMS configuration. The OPM is a fully automated case-picking capability centered on WITRON’s proprietary COM Case-Order Machine, configured to stack cases into store-friendly order pallets without the gaps common to robotic pallet building, and the CPS provides pallet-picking with path-optimised order picking supported by pick-by-voice operator guidance and automatic replenishment of pick fronts.
The deployment architecture integrated the CPS module into automated high-bay warehouses within each temperature chamber, the freezer high-bay having five pallet AS/RS cranes serving approximately 14,200 storage locations and the cooler high-bay having two pallet AS/RS cranes serving approximately 4,800 locations. WITRON acted as general contractor for IT, control engineering and mechanical systems while its subsidiary FAS designed and produced the conveyor elements, and an automated shipping buffer was implemented to optimise dispatch processes. The OPM configuration at Vaughan included ten COMs, contributing to a company-wide total of 42 COMs once ramp-up was complete, and the OPM was sized to handle an article range of about 3,800 SKUs with a daily peak picking performance approaching 170,000 cases.
Operationally the Witron WMS implementation materially altered order fulfilment workflows by automating nearly all internal DC picking processes except trailer unloading and loading, reducing manual picking labor and shifting worker activity to supervised pickfront operations and AS/RS interaction. Explicitly stated outcomes for Sobeys included higher operational transparency, lowest error rates, improved store-ready pallet sequencing that reduces shelf replenishment effort, and optimisations in service and logistics costs driven by improved order-pallet density. The system was designed for continuous operation at scale, running 20 hours a day, seven days a week.
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Buyer Intent: Companies Evaluating Witron WMS
- Sobeys Canada, a Canada based Retail organization with 128000 Employees
- Mitsubishi Logisnext United States, a United States based Manufacturing company with 2000 Employees
- Stout Risius Ross, a United States based Banking and Financial Services organization with 1594 Employees
Discover Software Buyers actively Evaluating Enterprise Applications
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