Eaches (Supply Chain Management)
Definition:
(noun, plural) – Individual units of product that are picked, packed, handled, or shipped separately rather than in case quantities or bulk packaging. In warehouse and distribution operations, an “each” represents a single sellable item as opposed to a case, pallet, or other grouped quantity.

Understanding Eaches in Warehouse Operations
In industrial and distribution settings, eaches represent the smallest unit of inventory that moves through your facility. When a customer orders three bottles of cleaning solution rather than a full case of twelve, your warehouse is fulfilling an eaches order. This type of picking has become increasingly common as e-commerce growth and just-in-time inventory practices have shifted demand patterns away from bulk ordering. For businesses with busy loading docks, understanding eaches handling is critical because it directly impacts labor costs, throughput rates, and order accuracy.
The Impact of Each Picking on Operations
Each picking operations require fundamentally different processes than case or pallet handling. According to industry research, eaches picking typically accounts for 55-65% of total warehouse labor costs despite often representing a smaller percentage of total volume moved. The reason is simple: handling individual units requires more touches, more time, and more precision than moving cases or pallets. A warehouse worker picking eaches might handle 100-150 units per hour, compared to 400-600 cases per hour in case-pick operations.
The accuracy demands are also higher with individual unit picking. While a mispicked case might mean twelve wrong items, a mispicked each is just one error, but customers notice every mistake. Studies show that eaches picking operations maintaining 99.5% accuracy or better see significantly lower return rates and customer service costs. For facilities processing thousands of order lines daily, even a 0.5% improvement in accuracy translates to substantial savings.
Common Challenges with Eaches Handling
Storage and Slotting
Storing eaches efficiently requires careful consideration of product velocity, dimensions, and picking patterns. High-velocity eaches should be slotted in golden zone locations—between waist and shoulder height—to minimize reaching and bending. Slower-moving items can be stored in less accessible positions without significantly impacting productivity.
Technology and Automation
Many distribution centers handling high volumes of eaches are implementing pick-to-light systems, voice picking, or mobile scanning devices to improve speed and accuracy. These technologies guide workers to the correct location and verify picks in real-time, reducing error rates by 30-50% compared to paper-based picking. Some facilities are also exploring automated storage and retrieval systems specifically designed for eaches, though the return on investment depends heavily on volume and SKU count.
Space Utilization
Eaches typically require more warehouse space per unit of product compared to case storage because individual items need accessible forward pick locations. A common approach is maintaining a smaller forward pick area stocked with eaches while keeping case quantities in reserve locations, though this requires regular replenishment to keep pick faces full.
Key Takeaways
Eaches picking is the foundation of modern order fulfillment, particularly as customer demands shift toward smaller, more frequent orders. Understanding how to optimize each handling improves both efficiency and profitability.
- Effective eaches handling requires balancing forward pick face accessibility with efficient use of warehouse space through smart replenishment strategies
- Eaches represent individual sellable units and typically consume 55-65% of warehouse labor costs despite smaller volumes compared to case picking operations
- Maintaining 99.5% or higher accuracy in eaches picking operations significantly reduces returns and customer service expenses
- Strategic slotting of high-velocity items in golden zone locations can improve picking productivity by 15-25%
- Technology solutions like pick-to-light and voice picking can reduce error rates by 30-50% in facilities handling each quantities

Check out our Solutions!
When Unified Resources needed to create functional office space inside an active warehouse without sacrificing valuable operational square footage, they partnered with DockStar Industrial for a fully customized prefabricated warehouse office solution. The project called for a large-scale modular office buildout that would provide multiple private offices, a conference room, and a break room—all while maintaining warehouse efficiency and minimizing disruption to the existing facility footprint. DockStar designed and supplied a complete in-plant office system tailored to the customer’s operational needs, creating a modern administrative workspace inside the warehouse while preserving critical storage and workflow areas.
Read MoreWhen a fast-moving industrial facility identified aging dock equipment, damaged doors, and outdated safety systems creating operational risk across multiple loading positions, they partnered with DockStar Industrial for a complete loading dock modernization project. Rather than replacing isolated components one at a time, the customer chose to complete a full dock renovation—upgrading every major piece of dock equipment across the affected loading positions to improve safety, efficiency, appearance, and long-term reliability. The result was a fully integrated dock package featuring new dock seals, vehicle restraints, communication lighting, dock accessories, and coordinated installation support designed to bring the entire dock system up to modern operational standards.
Read MoreAt busy service and distribution facilities, dock doors aren’t just building components—they’re critical operational assets. When doors begin showing signs of wear or become unreliable, it can slow operations, increase maintenance costs, and create safety concerns for employees working around the dock area. Earlier this year, DockStar partnered with a Northeast commercial facility to replace multiple aging dock doors with new heavy-duty sectional steel doors designed to support daily operational demands. The project required careful coordination across several stakeholders, detailed planning around door sizing and installation, and consistent communication to keep everything progressing on schedule.
Read More

