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Robotic Store Replenishment

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Robotic Store Replenishment

Robotic Store Replenishment

Berkshire Grey

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

Robotic Store Replenishment

Berkshire Grey
Unverified

This profile covers Berkshire Grey's robotic store replenishment and warehouse automation systems (Scoop trailer unloader, Core robotic picking, Stride/Dispatch sortation), a Boston-based company founded in 2013 and acquired by SoftBank. Vendor claims are strong: >99% uptime, >99% picking accuracy, 2x human throughput, 70–80% labor cost reduction, and highly autonomous dock execution with manual fallback for exceptions. Independent and community evidence is sparse but suggests partial autonomy with real-world limitations in continuous replenishment scenarios. No independent teardown or third-party benchmark data is available to validate vendor performance claims, so confidence in those specifics remains moderate. Pricing data comes from general market sources and third-party commerce sites rather than Berkshire Grey directly, and should be treated as indicative ranges only.

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Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Berkshire Grey deep report

Good
  • Berkshire Grey systems are deployed at scale with named enterprise customers including Walmart, Target, FedEx, and Maersk (UK).

    Wikipedia [7] and a Berkshire Grey press release [12] independently confirm named customer deployments including Maersk's UK showcase warehouse (2023); however, deployment scale (unit counts, throughput volumes) at each customer remains unverified by any independent source.

    from Berkshire Grey deep report →
  • Berkshire Grey went public via SPAC at a $2.7B valuation and was subsequently taken private by SoftBank — representing a dramatic valuation collapse from its SPAC peak.

    TechCrunch [8], Wikipedia [7], and Tracxn [13] independently confirm both the $2.7B SPAC valuation (February 2021) and the subsequent SoftBank go-private acquisition, with the Reddit/SPACs community [9] having flagged valuation concerns pre-merger; the magnitude of the valuation decline is materially relevant to assessing vendor financial stability and long-term deployment commitments.

    from Berkshire Grey deep report →
Bad
  • Berkshire Grey's Core robotic picking system achieves up to 2x human pick-and-release throughput with >99% picking accuracy and >99% uptime — and requires no prior SKU data from day one.

    All three metrics (throughput, accuracy, uptime) and the zero-SKU-data claim originate exclusively from Berkshire Grey's own product pages [4]; no independent third-party test, customer audit, or journalist benchmark in the dossier corroborates or refutes any of these figures.

    from Berkshire Grey deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.