The Adoption of robots in small and medium sized warehouses
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Date
2025
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Aston university
Abstract
Warehouse management has become essential to supply chain management due to
recent advancements. Automation has transformed many industries, particularly the
supply chain, where giant corporations have reaped significant benefits, but small
and medium-sized organisations have faced challenges. This dissertation seeks to
identify the challenges encountered by selected organisations when using robots in
their warehouses. This study included a comprehensive literature evaluation and
data collection from 30 research articles published between 2010 and 2024. The
Technology-Organisation-Environment (TOE) framework was used, and the
Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) was used to examine the factors influencing
small and medium-sized firms. The results revealed positive perceptions of robots'
benefits in operational efficiency, as they save workers' travel time and safeguard
their physical health by doing strenuous tasks, also increasing productivity, while
also emphasising employees' hesitance towards security concerns and job loss
regarding adoption. The methodology used in the dissertation was appropriate;
nonetheless, it primarily consisted of an analysis of current research, indicating a
deficiency of primary data stemming from insufficient direct contact with warehouse
owners to investigate and assess the causes behind their non-adoption.
Furthermore, it relied on previous research, which might introduce bias into the
results.
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Keywords
SLR, Toe, TAM, SMEs, AGVs, AMRs