Skip to main content

High-Volume Operations

When you're processing hundreds of delivery orders daily, small inefficiencies compound. This guide covers configurations and strategies for high-volume merchants.

Capacity planning

Time slot capacity

Set realistic per-slot order limits:

  • Monitor how many orders your team can handle per time window
  • Start conservative and increase as your team becomes efficient
  • Account for driver availability, vehicle capacity, and packing speed

Preparation time

Increase preparation time during peak periods:

  • Regular days: 2 hours
  • Peak days (holidays, sales): 4+ hours
  • This prevents last-minute orders from overwhelming your team

Route optimization at scale

Batch route creation

Instead of creating routes one at a time:

  1. Wait until most orders for a time slot are in
  2. Select all orders for the slot
  3. Create routes in bulk — Scrollengine groups them by geography
  4. Assign drivers to routes

Route templates

If you serve the same areas daily, establish route patterns:

  • Morning: North zone (Driver A), South zone (Driver B)
  • Afternoon: East zone (Driver C), West zone (Driver D)

Consistency helps drivers learn their areas and improve delivery speed.

Order management tips

Picklist efficiency

Use the Picklist feature per route rather than per order. This allows warehouse staff to pick all items for a route in one pass.

Status automation

Set up automated status transitions where possible:

  • Auto-advance from "Processing" to "Ready" when the picklist is completed
  • Auto-advance from "Ready" to "Out for Delivery" when the route starts

Monitoring

At high volume, watch these metrics:

MetricWhat to watch
Slot fill rateAre slots consistently full? Add capacity.
Late deliveriesConsistently late? Widen time slots or reduce capacity.
Failed deliveriesHigh failure rate? Review address validation and customer communication.
Driver utilizationDrivers idle? Consolidate routes. Too busy? Add drivers.

Scaling checklist

  • Time slots have capacity limits
  • Preparation time accounts for volume
  • Delivery zones are clearly defined (no overlaps)
  • Drivers are assigned per location
  • Picklists are generated per route
  • Monitoring is in place for key metrics
  • Escalation process for failed deliveries