The start of a new year creates a rare pause in warehouse operations.
Peak has passed. Volumes normalize. Leaders finally have space to reflect—not just on what happened last year, but on why certain problems keep repeating.
For many operations leaders, 2025 made one thing clear: warehouse labor management is no longer something you can afford to handle reactively. The decisions made at the beginning of the year often determine whether the next twelve months feel controlled—or constantly chaotic.
This article looks at what last year revealed about warehouse labor management and what leaders should intentionally rethink as they head into 2026.
Across industries, 2025 exposed the same pattern inside many distribution centers.
Even when demand softened or stabilized, labor challenges persisted:
The takeaway wasn’t that people weren’t working hard.
It was that the systems surrounding labor weren’t keeping up with operational complexity.
Many warehouses respond to labor challenges by doubling down on familiar tactics:
While these moves may relieve short-term pressure, they rarely solve the underlying issue. In fact, they often make labor harder to manage by increasing variability, fatigue, and inconsistency.
In 2026, warehouses that rely on reactive labor strategies will continue to feel behind—no matter how hard their teams work.
The new year is the best time to reset how labor is approached. Before volumes spike again, leaders have an opportunity to rethink a few core assumptions.
Successful operations focus on productivity, accountability, and alignment—not just filling shifts.
Measuring labor by time alone hides inefficiencies. Output-based metrics create clarity.
Stable performance across shifts outperforms short bursts of overexertion.
Supervisors perform best when they have visibility, standards, and support—not constant exceptions.
When labor management is intentional rather than reactive, the impact compounds throughout the year.
Operations often see:
Most importantly, leaders spend less time reacting—and more time planning.
By year-end, strong labor management doesn’t feel dramatic.
It looks like:
Success isn’t about perfection. It’s about control and adaptability.
The right time isn’t during peak.
It isn’t when service levels are already at risk.
The right time is now—when the year is just beginning and changes can be made proactively.
Warehouses that wait until problems reappear often find themselves reacting to the same issues again and again.
Because volumes are more stable and leaders have space to make proactive decisions before peak demand returns.
Yes. Labor remains the largest controllable cost and the biggest source of operational variability.
In many cases, yes—by improving planning, productivity, and consistency.
Because the underlying systems don’t change, even when headcount does.
Visibility, consistency, and alignment between labor and workload.
👇📅 We're here to help. There's no pitch - just a conversation. 📅👇
In any market, your supply chain can make or break your ability to compete well. Don't leave that to chance. We can help you create a stronger operation, so you never fall behind the competition.
Stop worrying about labor challenges and start enjoying a safe, lean, and rock-solid supply chain.
(800) 849-3132 | © FHI. All rights reserved.