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Brightpick Dispatcher
Brightpick Autopicker
Not yet assessed
- Height
- Giraffe variant: up to 19 ft / 5.8 m vertical reach; Gridpicker: up to 12 m / 40 ft height
- Payload
- —
- Verified autonomy
- not assessed
- Real deployment
- not assessed
- Status
- —
- Price
- —
Brightpick Dispatcher
Brightpick AutopickerBrightpick Dispatcher is an autonomous mobile robot (AMR) product from Brightpick (formerly Photoneo Brightpick Group, now operating under Zebra Technologies' umbrella after a March 2025 acquisition). It works alongside the Brightpick Autopicker to automate warehouse order picking, consolidation, and dispatch without fixed infrastructure. Real-world deployments (e.g., Superior Communications, Rohlik Group) confirm autonomous operation for the majority of picks, with 73% fully autonomous picks reported in one customer case study and a G2P fallback station handling the remainder — meaning humans do not drive the task but the system routes difficult items to a station. The system is commercially available via a RaaS model starting at ~$1,900/robot/month, with deployments live as of mid-2025. Some independent reviewers note higher integration risk relative to more established competitors.
Availability
Specification
- hardware_reach
- Giraffe variant: up to 19 ft / 5.8 m vertical reach; Gridpicker: up to 12 m / 40 ft height
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Brightpick Autopicker deep report
Brightpick Autopicker operates fully autonomously in warehouse aisles — performing picking, replenishment, sortation, buffering, and order consolidation without any human task involvement.
Vendor and trade press consistently describe autonomous in-aisle operation [1][2][6], but no independent teardown, third-party audit, or user community report confirms the absence of teleoperation fallback or remote human task supervision.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →Autopicker 2.0 achieves 70–80 picks per hour.
The 70–80 picks/hour figure is cited in a trade press article about Autopicker 2.0 [2], but the article draws directly from vendor-supplied information; no independent benchmark, customer throughput report, or third-party test exists in the dossier to corroborate this figure.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →300 Brightpick Autopicker robots have been deployed across the US and Europe.
The 300-robot deployment figure is consistent across a vendor press release [8] and trade press coverage of the funding round [6][7], but both trade press articles source the number from the company's own announcement — no independent customer census or third-party audit corroborates the total.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →37 Autopicker robots are deployed at Superior Communications' facility in LaVergne, TN — a named, real-world commercial deployment.
The Superior Communications deployment is detailed in a vendor press release [9], which is a company-originated source; no independent customer statement, journalist site visit, or third-party confirmation of the deployment's operational status appears in the dossier.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →The Autopicker Giraffe variant reaches up to 19 ft (5.8 m) vertically, tripling storage density.
The Giraffe's 19 ft reach and 3× density claim are stated on vendor product pages and news releases [1][10], but no independent structural test, customer facility report, or third-party measurement is present in the dossier to verify either the reach specification or the density multiplier.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →Brightpick raised $47M in total funding, including a $12M equity+debt round, and has 200+ employees.
The $47M total and $12M round are consistent across vendor press release [8] and trade press [6][7], and the employee count appears in the vendor press release [8]; however, all figures ultimately trace to company-issued statements with no independent financial filing or third-party HR verification in the dossier.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →
The Autopicker delivers 70–90% labor cost reduction (CapEx model) and RaaS payback in under 6 months.
These ROI figures appear only in vendor FAQ and demo pages [3][4][5] with no independent customer financial disclosure, analyst validation, or third-party case study in the dossier; the dossier itself assigns only 0.65 confidence and flags them as unverified vendor claims.
from Brightpick Autopicker deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.