Automotive Glass Fulfillment Technician

A day in this role

You clock in, power up your RF Modulated scanner, and head to the order picker. First stop: prepping a windshield or body-glass crate so it’s ready to receive product. You move through the aisles, select items with the scanner, and finish each pick by printing and applying a precise content label to the crate.

Next, you switch into packaging mode. You open a crate or metal rack using the right tool for the job—drill, saw, or cutting tool—then hand-build a sturdy box. You set the glass, add dunnage or foam, seal it with a tape gun, label the box or envelope, and stack it neatly on a pallet.

Before anything leaves, you audit. You count every part inside a crate or container to ensure the quantity matches the content label. You close the crate and secure it for shipment—stapled, banded, or shrink wrapped—and verify that all serial numbers and counts align with the container list for the truck load.

When trailers arrive, you inspect them and jump on a forklift to load or unload. You lift, move, and stack crates or racks of glass, scanning each container to the correct trailer or warehouse location. Along the way, you put nail guns, crow bars, hammers, and other hand or pneumatic tools to regular use.

Between waves, you handle replenishment. You drive a forklift or standup reach truck to transfer parts from one location to another with your RF Modulated scanner, open and prepare incoming crates, and stage them for pick racks—often using crow bars, hammers, and other hand or power tools.

You should be proficient in:

  • Warehouse Experience
  • Distribution Experience
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