Design. Validate. Execute.

Shorter Project Runtimes through end-to-end design

No reinterpretation between planning and operation. What you design is what gets executed.

Coordinates warehouse execution across people, automation, and systems in real time.

Modern automated warehouse
Solutions

Warehouse Execution Solutions for Real Operational Scenarios

LogisQ-WES adapts to different warehouse types, automation levels, and modernization contexts — without changing execution semantics across different warehouse scenarios.

Execution Across Warehouse Types

Manual Warehouses

Structured execution with clear task priorities and predictable process flows — no automation infrastructure required. Operators receive sequenced tasks, management gains full visibility.

Automated Warehouses

Deterministic execution across conveyors, shuttles, cranes, and robotic systems. One unified execution model regardless of hardware vendor or generation.

Distribution Centers

High throughput, strict sequencing, and stable execution for complex multi-stage distribution operations with tight SLA requirements.

E-Commerce Fulfillment

Fast order processing with dynamic re-prioritization under peak load. SLA-aware execution that stays stable even when order volumes spike.

Modernization & Rollout

Brownfield Modernization

Modernize step by step — wrap legacy hardware in modern execution semantics without risky 'big bang' replacements or operational downtime.

Greenfield Implementation

Build execution-ready warehouses from day one. What you define during planning is exactly what runs in production — no late reinterpretation at go-live.

Specialized Capabilities

Hazardous Goods

Controlled execution with strict process boundaries, enforced handling rules, and fully auditable flows for regulated goods.

AutoStore Integration

Orders flow through AutoStore cubes with the same execution consistency as any other warehouse zone — no special-case logic required.

Sorting & High-Throughput Systems

Deterministic sequencing and real-time execution for peak-load sorting and material flow systems.

Mixed Automation Environments

Unified execution across conveyors, shuttles, AMRs, AGVs, and manual zones — all orchestrated through a single execution layer.