Your WMS treats an ITAR part like a box of screws on the same shelf: problems and solutions
For a Simi Valley aerospace or biotech warehouse, a WMS has to respect controlled storage, lot segregation, and FIFO by expiry, not just bin and quantity. When Manhattan or an ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) add-on cannot, custom WMS at $60k to $140k over 5 to 7 months can.
Businesses in Simi Valley run into very specific operational problems. Across aerospace and defense, biotech and pharmaceuticals, small manufacturing, the same Defense and aerospace subcontractors handle compliance-heavy documentation and part traceability in spreadsheets, making it slow and error-prone to satisfy ITAR and quality audit requirements. keeps surfacing, manual workflows that do not scale, disconnected tools that leak data, and software that fights the team instead of helping it. The right custom build closes those gaps directly, turning the daily friction Simi Valley companies feel into systems that just work, so the team spends time on customers instead of workarounds.
Manhattan and ERP warehouse add-ons optimize bins, picks, and counts. They assume a part is a part. A Simi Valley regulated warehouse has constraints they do not enforce: ITAR-controlled parts that must be stored in access-restricted areas, lots that must be segregated and never commingled, and biotech materials that must be picked FIFO by expiry, not by convenience. A generic WMS will happily direct a picker to the nearest bin regardless of any of that.
So the warehouse runs the WMS for efficiency and a layer of human discipline for compliance, and the human layer fails the way human layers do. A controlled part gets stored in the wrong area, two lots get commingled, an expired biotech lot gets picked. The WMS did not stop it because it does not know your storage rules.
- Controlled parts need access-restricted storage the WMS must enforce
- Lot segregation matters and your WMS allows commingling
- Biotech materials require FIFO-by-expiry picking
- Compliance currently rides on human discipline, not the system
- Your warehouse has no controlled or expiry constraints
- Manhattan or your ERP add-on covers your needs
- Parts are fungible and bin optimization is all you need
- You cannot maintain custom storage-rule logic over time
- Controlled parts routed only to access-restricted storage automatically
- Lot segregation enforced so lots are never commingled
- FIFO-by-expiry picking for biotech and pharma materials
- Directed putaway and picking that builds compliance into the workflow
- Real-time inventory and location accuracy down to the controlled bin
- More configuration of storage rules than a generic WMS requires
- Often integrates with an existing ERP, adding integration complexity
- You own keeping storage and compliance rules current
- For a warehouse with no controlled or expiry constraints, a generic WMS is enough
The honest cost picture for Simi Valley
| Project scope | Typical cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| WMS with controlled-zone and lot-segregation rules | $60k to $90k | 5 months |
| Add FIFO-by-expiry picking and directed workflows | $90k to $120k | 5 to 6 months |
| Full WMS with ERP integration and scanning | $120k to $140k | 6 to 7 months |
Feature priorities for Simi Valley teams
Simi Valley warehouse management: the full scope
The engagements Simi Valley teams bring us most often: warehouse management system (WMS), WMS development, pick pack ship, warehouse automation, barcode and RFID, slotting optimization and inbound and outbound logistics.
Exactly what you get
You get a warehouse system that enforces your rules in the directed work itself: a controlled part can only be put away in a restricted zone, lots stay segregated, and dated biotech materials are picked FIFO by expiry, automatically. The picker is guided to the right bin and the noncompliant move is simply never offered. Real-time scanning keeps location and lot accuracy tight. It integrates with your ERP, your inventory management software, and your supply chain software so storage compliance connects to the rest of your operation.
How to choose a developer in Simi Valley
Choose a team that has built WMS logic for regulated or controlled storage, not just bin optimization. Ask how they would enforce a no-commingle lot rule and FIFO-by-expiry picking in directed work. Confirm they can integrate with your existing ERP rather than replacing it. The right partner will tell you plainly if your warehouse has no controlled or expiry constraints and a generic WMS would serve you better.
Timeline: what happens, and when
- !They treat all parts as fungible, ask how they handle controlled-storage zones
- !No lot-segregation logic, ask how they prevent commingling
- !They ignore expiry, ask how FIFO-by-expiry picking is enforced
- !No ERP integration plan, ask how the WMS connects to inventory
- !They quote without your storage rules, ask for a discovery phase
Most Simi Valley teams pricing warehouse management end up comparing notes on business intelligence dashboards, lms, internal tools too; the systems share one data spine.
Rohan advises mid-market and enterprise teams on ERP, CRM and custom software, and has led delivery on dozens of business-software builds.
Writes for Digital Heroes, shipping business software for 2,000+ brands across 55+ countries since 2017.
Frequently asked questions
Can Manhattan handle controlled storage?
It is a powerful WMS, but enforcing ITAR access zones and no-commingle lot rules for a mid-size Simi Valley warehouse often means heavy configuration or simply does not fit. Custom encodes your specific storage rules directly.
How does FIFO-by-expiry picking work?
The system directs pickers to the oldest-expiry lot first automatically, so dated biotech and pharma materials are consumed in order and an expired lot is never picked by convenience.
Does it replace our ERP?
Usually not. A custom WMS typically integrates with your existing ERP, adding the controlled-storage and lot-aware logic the ERP's warehouse module does not enforce.
How does it prevent lot commingling?
Segregation rules govern putaway, so a lot can only go to a location that keeps it separate, and the system refuses a putaway that would commingle. Compliance becomes part of directed work.
Is custom WMS worth it without controlled storage?
No. If your warehouse has no controlled, segregation, or expiry constraints, a generic WMS or ERP add-on focused on bin optimization is the right, lower-cost choice.