Both Sides of the Warehouse Floor: A Buyer-Turned-Builder on Frontline Tech

By Megan Valesano on May 20, 2026

Workers in a warehouse

Both Sides of the Warehouse Floor: A Buyer-Turned-Builder on Frontline Tech
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Key takeaways

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    The planning phase is non-negotiable: Rushed or under-resourced planning is the single biggest predictor of a failed technology rollout, not the technology itself.
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    Frontline workers are the experts: Going into the field, asking questions, and truly listening to end users reveals the critical gaps that no executive can see from a conference room.
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    Pilots only work when you're honest about what you measure: Running a pilot and ignoring the results is worse than not running one at all.
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    The buyer-to-builder lens sharpens every decision: Having operated on both sides of the vendor relationship, Corbin brings an insider's view of the blind spots that neither buyers nor providers typically catch alone.

Most people who talk about frontline technology adoption have seen it from one side: either as the enterprise leader buying and deploying it, or as the solution provider selling and implementing it. Keri Corbin, Senior Vice President of Enterprise Systems and Business Optimization at Decision Point Technologies, has seen it from both. That dual vantage point shapes everything about how she thinks about what works, what fails, and why.

In a recent episode of the Frontline Innovators podcast, Corbin traced her path from eight years deploying warehouse technology at DHL Supply Chain to her current role building solutions and optimizing operations at Decision Point Technologies. Along the way, she collected a set of hard lessons that most organizations learn the painful way, and she shared them with unusual candor.

The common thread through all of it? The people closest to the work are almost always the last ones asked.

The Real Cost of Poor Frontline Adoption

Most executives, when asked about the impact of poor frontline technology adoption, focus on operational metrics, ticket close rates, order throughput, error rates. Corbin reframes the conversation around something more fundamental: customer experience.

When frontline workers can't use their technology effectively, the chain of consequences moves fast. Productivity drops. Order fulfillment slows. The customer on the other end of that chain, your customer's customer, feels it. That impact walks directly back to revenue and expense targets.

Corbin notes that making this case to leaders who aren't close to frontline operations is easier today than it was a decade ago. Consumer experiences with apps are supposed to be intuitive, frictionless, designed around the user, which has raised expectations everywhere. That shared frame of reference gives operations leaders a new way to help executives connect the dots between frontline friction and business outcomes.

Signs Your Rollout Is Already in Trouble

Corbin has lived through enough implementations to spot the warning signs early. These are the patterns that, left unaddressed, turn promising projects into expensive restarts.

The Planning Phase Was Treated as a Formality

This is Corbin's hill to die on. "The planning phase of a project is the number one most important part of a project," she says, and almost every executive she's ever worked with instinctively wants to move through it quickly. The result: teams don't define what success looks like, don't map the exceptions and edge cases, and don't build the buffer that protects the rollout when things inevitably shift.

End Users Weren't Asked Until It Was Too Late

Corbin's most memorable early lesson came when she and her team rolled out touchscreens to a warehouse with genuine excitement, and were met with immediate resistance. They had assumed the new tech would be an upgrade. They never asked the people who would actually use it. "That was my very first experience of we forgot to ask the end users if they thought this was going to be great," she recalls.

Another early lesson: rolling out a new GUI at an insurance company without realizing that call center workers didn't know how to use a mouse. They had memorized keyboard shortcuts for years. On launch day, they processed 20 fewer orders per hour. The rollout had to be walked back entirely.

Training Was Compressed to Protect the Go-Live Date

This pattern is one of the most frustrating in large enterprise technology projects. Six months before launch, four weeks of workforce preparation seemed essential. Then funding approval took longer than expected. A technical dependency pushed the timeline. But the go-live date never moved. The training window got compressed. And the people who had nothing to do with any of those delays bore the full cost of the disruption.

4 Principles for Getting It Right

Corbin's advice isn't theoretical. It's drawn from direct experience on both sides of the vendor-customer relationship, and from the ongoing work of optimizing operations inside Decision Point Technologies itself.

1. Spend Real Time in the Field

There is no substitute for standing where your frontline workers stand. Corbin spent years in DHL warehouses, listening to teams and watching workflows. The questions she asked, "Why do you do it that way?" surfaced problems that no project plan or stakeholder interview would have caught. Leaders who understand a day in the life of their end users make better decisions about what technology to deploy and how to deploy it.

2. Expand, Don't Compress, the Planning Phase

Corbin argues that the planning phase should be extended as long as it needs to go, because the value it generates outweighs everything that comes after. That means defining clear success criteria, mapping every exception, and understanding the pinch points that only a few people in the organization know about. Build realistic buffers into the project plan before the first stakeholder meeting.

3. Run Pilots That You're Actually Willing to Act On

Corbin is blunt: "I hate pilots because they usually don't get measured." A pilot is only valuable when you identify the right early adopters, people who give honest, critical feedback, create a safe space for them to do so, and have the courage to take those findings back to leadership. If the pilot reveals a problem and the project proceeds anyway, you haven't run a pilot. You've created the illusion of due diligence.

4. Ask What a Perfect System Looks Like, Then Build Toward It

Corbin uses a freeing question with her internal teams and customers alike: if cost and implementation complexity were taken off the table, what would the perfect system look like for your end users? Separating the "what should this do" conversation from the "how do we build it" conversation surfaces requirements that would otherwise stay buried under constraints.

The Muscle Memory Problem

One of the most insightful moments in the conversation came when discussing why even well-planned rollouts face resistance in the field. A field service leader had put it succinctly: the problem isn't teaching the new method. It's unwinding the muscle memory of the old one.

When a technician is three stops behind on a stressful day, absorbing a new workflow and new technology simultaneously, the path of least resistance is to revert to what they've always done. This isn't a training failure. It's a human one, and it's predictable. Leaders who account for it in their rollout strategy, rather than assuming that training alone will overcome it, build more durable adoption.

Practicing What You Sell

Corbin's position at DecisionPoint Technologies gives her a vantage point that few executives have. The work she does to optimize her own company's operations, integrating acquired businesses, building single-solution offerings, training field service teams, mirrors exactly what she asks of her customers.

That alignment, she says, is the most valuable thing a technology partner can offer. Not speeds and feeds. Not a roadmap full of RFID and AI initiatives. A partner who understands where you are today, where you need to go, and can show you a realistic pathway between the two, starting with a manageable step and building ROI layer by layer.

Listen to the full episode of Frontline Innovators with Keri Corbin here, or find it wherever you listen to podcasts.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

What changes when you've been on both the buyer and provider side of a technology rollout?

When you've been the customer, you know exactly what it feels like when a vendor doesn't understand your operation. Corbin carries that memory into every customer conversation at DecisionPoint Technologies. She applies the same questions she once asked of her technology partners to her own team's internal processes, which is why her business consultants lead with operational problems rather than product specs. That cross-side experience produces a sharper, more honest readiness lens than most vendors or buyers develop on their own.

How do you make the technology business case to leaders who aren't close to frontline operations?

Use the consumer experiences they already have. Every executive has felt a frustrating app interaction and a smooth one. Draw a direct line between the experience your frontline workers have with their tools and the experience your customers have at the end of the chain. Poor adoption becomes a customer retention and revenue conversation, not just an operations one.

What makes a technology pilot actually useful?

Three things: the right participants (early adopters willing to give honest, critical feedback), a safe space for that feedback to surface, and genuine willingness to act on what you learn, including delaying a rollout if necessary. A pilot where negative findings are ignored isn't a pilot. It's theater.

How should leaders think about training in the context of a technology rollout?

Training timelines should be treated as load-bearing elements of the project plan, not as flexible buffers that absorb schedule slippage. When training gets compressed, the people who bear the cost are the frontline workers, and ultimately your customers. Building realistic training windows into the plan from day one is a strategic decision, not a logistical detail.

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