Welcome to the DynaPick Help & Resources page. This page provides an overview of DynaPick, common warehouse automation scenarios, product capabilities.
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No. DynaPick does not replace Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse Management. DynaPick extends the existing warehouse execution process with light-directed guidance. Dynamics 365 remains the core ERP/WMS process environment for warehouse work, inventory, locations, license plates, and operational transactions.
No. DynaPick is designed to work directly with Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse Management. Customers do not need to operate a separate warehouse application or separate warehouse management system for pick-to-light or put-to-light execution.
No separate warehouse middleware is required to manage the light-directed warehouse execution process. DynaPick keeps warehouse tasks connected to Dynamics 365 warehouse work and extends the process with connected lights, indicators, gateways, smart buttons, and optional e-paper labels.
Direct alignment helps customers avoid disconnected execution layers, duplicate process logic, and fragmented operational visibility. Warehouse work remains controlled in Dynamics 365 while DynaPick adds visual guidance at the point of work.
DynaPick can support pick-to-light, put-to-light, sorting, cluster picking, sales picking, replenishment, consolidation, cycle counting, tote-based execution, license plate-based execution, and other warehouse scenarios where visual guidance can improve accuracy and speed.
Yes. DynaPick can support warehouse scenarios where license plates are part of picking, movement, sorting, fulfillment, or other warehouse execution activities. Visual guidance can help operators identify the correct location, item, quantity, license plate, tote, or destination.
Yes. DynaPick can support tote-based and destination-based operations. Tote indicators, put lights, smart buttons, or optional displays can guide operators to place picked items into the correct tote or destination, helping reduce sorting and consolidation errors.
Yes. DynaPick can support cluster picking, where one operator picks items for multiple orders, totes, containers, or destinations in a single picking sequence. Visual pick and tote guidance can help reduce the risk of placing items into the wrong tote, order, or destination.
When multiple users are active in the same aisle, location group, zone, or pick face area, DynaPick can provide visual guidance connected to each warehouse task. This helps operators identify the correct location, item, quantity, tote, or license plate and can reduce confusion, duplicated effort, and wrong-location picking.
Yes, where applicable. DynaPick can align visual guidance with handheld-driven warehouse execution and confirmation activities. The exact process depends on the customer’s Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management configuration and the selected operational scenario.
Yes. DynaPick can support additional warehouse activities such as replenishment and cycle counting where location-level visual guidance helps users identify the correct location or action more quickly and consistently.
Depending on the deployment design, DynaPick can support shelf lights, tote indicators, gateways, smart buttons, and e-paper labels.
Shelf lights are used to guide operators to the correct pick or put location. They help reduce manual search time and make the required warehouse action clearer at the point of work.
Tote indicators are used for put-to-light, sorting, cluster picking, and multi-tote operations. They help operators identify the correct tote, bin, order, license plate, container, or destination for the picked item.
Yes. e-paper labels can be used where customers want to display bin, shelf, location, license plate, quantity, or process-related information directly at the point of work. The use of e-paper labels depends on the warehouse design and deployment scenario.
Gateways are used to connect warehouse devices and support communication between the Dynamics 365 warehouse process and physical light-directed hardware on the warehouse floor.
Smart buttons can be used where operator confirmation or device-level interaction is required. The specific behavior depends on the configured process and hardware design.
Yes. DynaPick helps reduce picking, sorting, and consolidation errors by giving operators clear visual direction at the point of work. In cluster picking and tote-based scenarios, visual guidance can help ensure the correct item is placed into the correct tote, order, or destination.
Yes. DynaPick can reduce manual search time, reduce interpretation effort, and help operators identify the correct location, item, quantity, tote, or destination faster. This can improve execution speed and overall warehouse productivity.
Yes. Because DynaPick provides visual guidance at the point of work, it can reduce dependency on operator memory, paper-based instructions, and detailed warehouse layout knowledge. This can help new, temporary, or seasonal workers become productive faster.
DynaPick helps guide users through tasks in a consistent way across operators, shifts, zones, and work assignments. This can reduce variation in execution and help supervisors maintain a more controlled warehouse process.
No. DynaPick can be used by organizations of different sizes where picking accuracy, speed, and warehouse execution consistency are important. The deployment approach can be scaled based on warehouse layout, number of locations, order volume, device density, and operational needs.
DynaPick is relevant for warehouse managers, distribution center supervisors, supply chain and operations leaders, warehouse operators, IT teams, business system owners, implementation teams, and organizations that want to improve warehouse execution while keeping the process connected to Dynamics 365.
A typical evaluation should review the current warehouse process, picking and sorting scenarios, warehouse zones and locations, license plate usage, tote or cart design, work creation and release process, confirmation steps, device requirements, network approach, gateway placement, and expected order volume.
Customers should identify where cluster picking or tote-based guidance will create the highest benefit, review how work is created and confirmed in Dynamics 365, define light and indicator behavior, review physical layout and cart/tote structure, confirm network coverage and gateway placement, and plan training around both the Dynamics 365 workflow and the physical light-directed process.
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