Automation is no longer a luxury in the supply chain; it is a necessity. With a shrinking labor market and e-commerce demand skyrocketing, robots, AMRs, ASRSs, and AGVs are finding their way into warehouses at an unprecedented rate. A recent McKinsey podcast highlights that while robotics and automation tech are accelerating, the bigger obstacle is integrating these systems into operations. Leaders remain “nervous about scaling beyond pilots” because legacy systems and integration complexity hold them back.
We see a recurring problem in the industry. Businesses invest heavily in cutting-edge robotics but rely on "old school" integration methods to connect them to their Warehouse Management Systems (WMS). This creates islands of automation—rigid, custom-coded connections that are expensive to maintain and nearly impossible to scale. Warehouses running older WMSs have used heavy customization for automation and they now face a security risk, as well as upgrade challenges that are wrought with challenges. Scaling automation is thereby limited by the software and integration layers, not the robots and automation.
There is a better way to approach this challenge. It starts by shifting your mindset from building custom connections to mapping standard ones and focusing on the software layer as the warehouse orchestrator. The industry is moving to software-defined, interoperable automation and as hardware becomes more flexible and programmable, the orchestration platform becomes the strategic control point.
The hidden cost of point-to-point integration
In a traditional setup, integrating a new robotics vendor often means writing custom code. You dig through the WMS source code, create vendor-specific hooks, and build a unique solution for that site.
This might work for a single pilot project. But what happens when you want to roll that same robot out to five different distribution centers?
In the traditional model, you start over. You pay for a full implementation and customization four or five separate times. We saw this with a large beverage company, which faced the reality of paying for full implementations multiple times with the same vendor across similar WMS versions. This approach is not sustainable. It inflates the total cost of ownership and creates a massive web of technical debt.
Furthermore, these custom point-to-point integrations are rarely "upgrade safe." If you upgrade your WMS, you risk breaking the custom code that talks to your robots. If the vendor updates their software, you might have to rewrite your integration. You become locked in, afraid to touch anything for fear of bringing operations to a halt.
A new standard: Mapping vs. building
The solution lies in decoupling the integration from the core system. This is the core principle of the robotics hub in the Blue Yonder WMS.
Instead of building a ground-up integration for every new robot or site, robotics hub provides a set of standard, general-purpose APIs. The WMS becomes the standard connection point. The robotics vendor maps their data to these standard APIs, rather than the WMS customizing its code to fit the vendor.
This shift from "building" to "mapping" changes the economic equation of automation:
- Write once, deploy everywhere: If you implement Locus robots at one site using a robotics hub, you don't need to rebuild that integration for the next four sites. You essentially "copy and paste" the mapping. The hard work is done once.
- Upgrade safety: Because the APIs are standard, you can upgrade your WMS without worrying about breaking your automation workflows.
Vendor neutrality: You are no longer locked into a single vendor. You can run Locus bots in one aisle and a different vendor in another, all orchestrated by the same WMS logic.
Real-world lessons in scalability
We can look at real-world scenarios to understand why this architectural decision matters.
Take the example of another global beverage manufacturer. This customer undertook a massive implementation where the integration wasn't properly decoupled from their core enterprise systems. Because everything was tightly wound together, redoing or fixing parts of the system became a monumental effort. This highlights the importance of a decoupled strategy—where your WMS, your ERP, and your automation layers can evolve independently without toppling the whole structure.
On the other hand, we have seen other instances where the pressure to simply "get a project done" can overshadow long-term strategy. It is easy to focus on the trees—getting one specific vendor live at one specific site—and miss the forest. The forest is your long-term ability to upgrade, swap vendors, and maintain a secure, modern software stack. When you bypass standard hubs to "slam in" a custom integration, you might win the short-term deadline, but you lose on long-term flexibility.
Unifying the warehouse ecosystem
Robotics hub is not just about robots. It is about unified resource management.
As warehouse technology evolves, you will likely have a mix of automation: autonomous mobile robots for transport, pick-to-light systems for fulfillment, and voice or vision technology for human workers.
Without a central hub, these systems operate in silos. A robot might drop a pallet in a location, but the next machine (or human) doesn't know it's there without a custom message. Robotics Hub acts as the central conductor. It allows the WMS to govern the flow of work across all resources—human and machine.
We are actively expanding these capabilities to onboard new automation types, such as ASRS and various voice and vision devices. The goal is a single operational view that lets you balance workloads dynamically across your entire facility, regardless of who—or what—is doing the work.
The bottom line on business value
For IT teams and leadership, the argument for Robotics Hub comes down to speed and cost.
- 50% reduction in onboarding time: Standard APIs mean vendors can connect faster.
- 60% reduced implementation costs: When rolling out existing vendors to new sites, the savings are massive because you reuse proven mappings.
This capability is now included in our Warehouse Management Solution. This isn't an upsell; it is a fundamental component of a modern WMS strategy. We are moving away from the days of billable hours for endless customization and toward a future of standardized, scalable, and secure connectivity.
Moving forward
If you are looking at your three- to five-year automation plan, you cannot afford to ignore an integration strategy. The cost of being on an "island of automation" is too high.
By adopting a robotics hub, you protect your business from technical debt and position yourself to adopt new technologies faster than the competition. You stop building the same bridges repeatedly and start focusing on moving traffic across them.




