Automated Cycle Count

Real-time, scan-free inventory visibility across all defined areas

Accurate inventory visibility is the foundation of efficient operations, yet most organizations struggle with manual cycle counts, stockouts despite “in stock” system data, slow inventory turns, operational delays.

Wiliot provides automated, continuous inventory visibility across all defined areas using battery-free IoT Pixels and area-based infrastructure.

The solution application automatically:

  • Counts inventory continuously without manual scanning

  • Tracks inventory movement between defined areas in real-time

  • Identifies discrepancies between system records and physical location

  • Provides area-level inventory accuracy (storage rooms, coolers, freezers, vehicles)

No scanning required - inventory updates automatically as products move through facilities.

Significant increase in inventory accuracy (vs. 60-80% manual baseline)

$5M-$25M annual enterprise savings from labor reduction, improved availability, and optimized inventory levels

ROI in less than one year on average

Examples of Industry Applications

Quick-Service Restaurants

Challenge: Managing inventory across dry storage, coolers, freezers with limited staff

Outcome: Significant reduction in manual counting, major reduction in waste from better FIFO/FEFO management

Grocery & Retail Backrooms

Challenge: Knowing what's available in backroom vs. sales floor

Outcome: Improved order fulfillment, reduction in safety stock

Healthcare Facilities

Challenge: Tracking medical supplies, linens, equipment across departments

Outcome: Reliable inventory accuracy, reduction in emergency re-orders

Warehouse Operations

Challenge: Continuous cycle counting across large, multi-area facilities

Outcome: Millions in annual labor savings, elimination of annual physical counts

Distribution Centers

Challenge: Managing inbound, storage, and outbound inventory simultaneously

Outcome: Faster order fulfillment from accurate location data

Download the
Solution Brief