It pays to automate!
With the hort industry struggling to attract staff at key times of the growing season, many businesses are taking the leap to automation.
My Food Bag says the technology has enabled a 48% increase in the number of recipes customers can choose from each week.
Meal kit and food solutions provider, My Food Bag, says it has completed the implementation of automated pick technology in its Christchurch and Auckland distribution centres.
The company says the technology has enabled a 48% increase in the number of recipes customers can choose from each week and improved both productivity and picking accuracy across the business.
My Food Bag invested $5 million to bring the technology to the North and South Islands for its My Food Bag, Bargain Box, Made and Fresh Start brands.
Mark Winter, chief executive of My Food Bag, says the business has seen an instant change since the installation of automated pick technology.
“Every week we are already packing more than a million food items across our distribution centres and this technology enabled us to do more,” Winter says.
He says the technology enables a “vast improvement” in customer choice, productivity, and quality.
“It was important to us that all our customers have the benefit of this technology because the automation simplifies the process of packing our boxes and ensures each meal kit is methodically packed how we want it.”
Winter says that after the first week of deliveries using the system, customers have been proactively thanking the company for the change in how the boxes are packed.
“The automated pick technology has also enabled us to offer around 1.5 times more recipes each week, with more than 60 different meals to choose from a week. It also means we can extend the range depth and breadth within our Kitchen offering,” he says.
Winter says that after the technology was rolled out in the Auckland distribution centre in April this year, there was an increase in the accuracy of picking ingredients.
“Now we have completed our Christchurch installation, we expect to see similar results in the South Island.”
The National Wild Goat Hunting Competition has removed 33,418 wild goats over the past three years.
New Zealand needs a new healthcare model to address rising rates of obesity in rural communities, with the current system leaving many patients unable to access effective treatment or long-term support, warn GPs.
Southland farmers are being urged to put safety first, following a spike in tip offs about risky handling of wind-damaged trees
Third-generation Ashburton dairy farmers TJ and Mark Stewart are no strangers to adapting and evolving.
When American retail giant Cosco came to audit Open Country Dairy’s new butter plant at the Waharoa site and give the green light to supply their American stores, they allowed themselves a week for the exercise.
Fonterra chair Peter McBride says the divestment of Mainland Group is their last significant asset sale and signals the end of structural changes.