Engineering & Construction
Dane’s AMRs Bridge the Inventory Management Gap Between Shelf Stock and WMS Accuracy
Automated robots help warehouses eliminate costly inventory discrepancies by delivering real-time accuracy where manual systems fall short
Key takeaways
Dane Technologies' AMRs use Cognex cameras to reconcile physical shelf stock with WMS data, reducing costly inventory discrepancies.
Dan Johnson evolved Dane Technologies from a safety-first automation startup into an inventory-focused AMR leader for multi-site warehouses and retail environments.
Macro ecommerce growth and continuous innovation in supply chain tech make it a strong sector for both enterprise investment and early-career professionals.
Automated Mobile Robots (AMRs) are transforming how supply chains address the persistent challenge of inventory accuracy. Warehouses and 3PL providers face mounting pressure to maintain real-time stock visibility as ecommerce accelerates fulfillment demands. According to McKinsey & Company, automation can reduce logistics costs by 30% in high-performing operations. AMRs also minimize human error in repetitive inventory tasks, improving efficiency across warehouse networks. These capabilities position AMRs as essential tools for modern inventory management.
Automation can reduce logistics costs by 30% in high-performing operations.
How are robotics companies addressing the widening gap between what’s on the shelf and what’s logged in the system? Also, what does that mean for the future of inventory management?
On this episode of Hammer Down, host Mike Bush meets up with Dan Johnson, Founder and CEO at Dane Technologies, during the Manifest Conference in Vegas. They discuss the evolution of Johnson's company from a safety-first automation startup to a leader in inventory-focused AMRs for multi-site warehouses and retail environments.
Highlights from the conversation:
- Robots That Think for Inventory: Dane's latest AMRs integrate best-in-class barcode scanning using Cognex cameras, helping reconcile actual stock locations with warehouse management systems.
- From Finance to Fulfillment: Johnson explains how customer collaboration drove the company's pivot from his roots in finance to advanced robotics in logistics.
- A Sector Built on Growth: Johnson highlights how macro trends and constant innovation make supply chain tech an ideal field for early-career professionals.
Dan Johnson is the Founder and CEO of Dane Technologies. He is an entrepreneur and seasoned executive with expertise in launching and scaling technology companies across logistics, healthcare, and sustainability sectors. Johnson has led the development of autonomous mobile robots and patented software solutions for asset and emissions management. His earlier finance career included senior roles at RBC Dain Rauscher and Van Kampen, equipping him with strong capital-raising and operational leadership skills.
About the author
Beginning his career by learning how to tell a brand’s story, leveraging marcom to build market share, utilizing PR to get people engaged, and innovating trust-based relationships between products and people, He took on diverse challenges and continually grew. Mike created the first ever SEO practice in Washington DC — generating $10M+ in revenue for 10+ clients. Throughout my career, Mike gained unique experiences such as spearheading marcom for a company after a real-time suicide (incident inspired a Law & Order SVU episode) with minimal negative publicity. And advising a client in PR best practices after an employee had committed a highly publicized terrorist attack in the US. Company was able to maintain all major financial relationships (JPM, BofA, Well Fargo, AmEx, etc.). He worked for a leader in the automotive services industry — building a reputation as nationally recognized expert on road rage (including an appearance on Court TV as a Subject Matter Expert). This included creating media that generated 100M+ impressions.