A recent study by Peerless Research Group shows that labor shortages and rising labor costs remain the top reasons companies adopt robotics in warehouses and distribution centers.
What’s Related
The January 2025 survey, conducted for Logistics Management, Modern Materials Handling, and Supply Chain Management Review, gathered responses from 217 professionals directly involved with robotic automation. The results provide a snapshot of the industry’s current state and future prospects.
Key findings
Top drivers of robotics adoption:
55% cited labor availability constraints as the #1 motivator
42% cited labor costs
Additional motivators include improving worker productivity and reducing physical strain
Top robotics use cases today:
Picking (33%)
Truck loading/unloading (33%)
Packing (29%)
Sorting (25%)
Impact on workers:
55% said robotics reduces employee travel time
50% said it reduces lifting of heavy loads
46% said it helps create a better work environment and improves retention
Adoption trends:
48% of companies already use robots
32% plan to adopt within the next 3 years
43% expect to increase robotics budgets in 2025
Challenges:
Only 32% have approved funding for new robotics initiatives
Companies cite integration hurdles and internal knowledge gaps as major obstacles
However, 46% are very or extremely willing to invest in robotics education
What’s next?
The study suggests that while many companies are still in the early stages of their robotics journey, momentum is building fast.
“Labor availability and costs are clearly driving the industry’s robotics push,” said Peerless Research Group. “Companies are looking for ways to boost productivity while supporting their workforce.”
As labor challenges persist, more companies are expected to move from pilots to full-scale deployments in the coming years.