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How to Prepare for the January Slowdown Without Losing Momentum

Written by FHI | Nov 7, 2025 1:17:55 PM

Everyone plans for the Q4 surge — few plan for the January drop-off.

After the holidays, order volumes sink, labor costs remain elevated, and productivity often plummets because teams are mentally and physically drained. While the rest of the industry coasts into the new year, high-performing distribution centers treat January as a strategic reset.

The slowdown is not a threat — it’s a window of opportunity.

This article shows how to use January to:

  1. Tighten cost-per-case
  2. Boost labor productivity
  3. Reduce turnover
  4. Build momentum into Q1 and Q2

 

The Post-Peak Dip Is Predictable

Across most warehouse operations — retail, grocery, and e-commerce — January volume drops 15–35% compared to the final six weeks of Q4.

The symptoms are consistent:

  • Surplus labor
  • Idle dock doors
  • Reduced inbound flow
  • Lagging motivation

But the deeper problem is loss of rhythm.

Peak season forces discipline — every minute matters. January removes urgency, and without intention, performance habits disappear.

 

The Top 5 Priorities for January Success

✅ 1. Shift from Volume to Efficiency

Q4 rewards speed.
January rewards discipline.

Move KPIs from:

Cases-per-hour → Cost-per-case

Output volume → First-pass accuracy

Overtime → Lean staffing model

 

✅ 2. Conduct a Workforce Reset

The highest ROI action in January is skill uplift:

  • Cross-train underutilized associates
  • Rotate people into new areas (inbound, putaway, VAS, loading)
  • Identify future leads and team trainers

 

A slowdown is the cheapest time to invest in your people.

 

✅ 3. Audit & Eliminate Invisible Waste

January exposes what peak season hides.

Run 30-minute walk audits on:

  • Travel paths
  • Pallet flow
  • Slotting / Re-slotting needs
  • Dock staging congestion

Capture one improvement per shift and implement within 48 hours.

Small improvements compound into big gains when volumes return.

 

✅ 4. Protect Culture: Avoid the Whiplash

Nothing crushes engagement faster than:

Hiring aggressively Q4…

Cutting people aggressively Q1.


Instead of layoffs:

Reduce overtime

Rotate associates through skill development assignments

Redirect labor into cost-saving kaizen projects


When people feel secure, morale stays high — and turnover stays low.

 

✅ 5. Improve Forecasting With Q4 Data

January is where insight happens.

Analyze:

  • Shift output patterns
  • Overtime burnout
  • Throughput consistency by crew
  • Forecast accuracy vs. actual volume

Feed that back into:

  • Q2 seasonal planning
  • Labor forecasting models
  • Slotting assignments by SKU velocity

The slowdown becomes a strategic advantage.

 

Managed Labor as a “Stabilizer” After Peak

Most companies underestimate how long it takes to get internal headcount back to a steady state.

A managed labor provider stabilizes:

  • Headcount
  • Process discipline
  • Cost-per-case
  • Daily production rhythm

Instead of letting January drift, managed labor ensures accountability continues.

 

 

January Checklist (use this in your ops meeting)

 

Focus Area Action Item
People Cross-train, assign mini leadership tasks
Process Swap speed metrics for accuracy metrics
Planning Audit dock flow and travel paths
Continuous Improvement Track “1 win per shift”

 

Print this and block 30 minutes daily to review progress.

 

January doesn’t slow you down — January prepares you for the year you’re about to build.
The DCs that win don’t wait for momentum. They make it.

 

FAQ / Q&A

Q1: How do I maintain productivity when volume drops?
Shift from throughput KPIs to efficiency KPIs — cost-per-case, accuracy, and labor utilization.

Q2: What should I focus on during January?
Cross-training, labor optimization, and eliminating waste revealed during the peak rush.

Q3: How does managed labor help during slowdowns?
It stabilizes output, keeps costs predictable, and prevents turnover whiplash.

Q4: What’s the biggest mistake warehouses make in January?
Letting urgency evaporate. January discipline = April profitability.

Q5: How do I justify labor cost when volume falls?
Show ROI through performance uplift: cross-training + efficiency projects reduce CPC long term.

 

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