The Warehouse

The NJ warehouse, just like the one I toured in LA, has product segregated into three areas: high value items, large items and everything else. Items like CPUs and memory, expensive products that can easily grow feet and walk away are kept inside "the cage" and only certain employees are allowed to work in there:


Tons of AMD and Intel CPUs line these shelves, I managed to secure a few for you all...

The large items (things like TVs and cases) are kept in the back of the warehouse:

Despite the quantity of TVs, monitors and cases, even Newegg employees must order from the website. No product is allowed to leave the warehouse without an order attached to it, and even then it must be delivered by UPS or FedEx, it can't be hand-carried out.

All the rest of the products line shelves of the warehouse, snaked through by conveyor belts that are used to fill orders.

Index How a Bill Becomes a L...err, How an Order Becomes a Tote
Comments Locked

78 Comments

View All Comments

  • GTaudiophile - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    I live in DC. No contest for me :(

    I would love to see Newegg, a company that leads in so many ways, take a leadership role in terms of making their business more "green" friendly.

    Add some solar panels to the roof of that warehouse, try to generate as much of their own power as possible.

    Use eco-friendly packaging. Recycle as much as possible.

    Encourage FedEx/UPS/USPS to pickup packages in natural gas vehicles.

    Add some plants to the interior of the warehouse (the Ferrari factory has this).

    Encourages their OEM partners to use more recyclable packaging.

    What about use some Ecoflex Plastics from BASF?

    Offer incentives/product discounts to employees who commute by bike or public transportation.

    The list goes on and on. And every little bit helps.



  • Kendokan - Sunday, May 25, 2008 - link

    A very low margin/very high volume business is not the ideal place to be a leader in environmental issues.
  • Zoomer - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    You're going about this the wrong way.

    Add some plants and water features of the warehouse! Having good feng shui will ensure that Newegg grows and grows!
  • shaggy77 - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    Hi,

    Nice little write up on the Newegg operations in NJ. I never knew what a warehouse looked like inside after years of working in them! :p Still a nice piece showing the folks how the order is processed and be to appreciate the work and tech that comes with your order. Most of my time in warehouses everything was hand picked and counted. The only computer was the UPS machine for ship outs. I have never had a problem with Newegg when it came to my orders. I love using them. However what kills me is the sales tax since I am in New Jersey. 7% can be a deal killer for me when something I want to purchase is the same price as the egg. I would wait an extra day or two for the shipment on orders costing more than several hundred dollars. Also we have a Micro Center in the northern half of the state. That store is in an Urban Enterprise Zone so sales tax is 3.5%. As of late, several of my dollars have been there since MC has had better deals than NE plus with same day service and lower sales tax paid. Just like everyone else I paid my fair share of sales tax I would like to have a bit of relief from those taxes when I buy over the net.
  • Anonymous Freak - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    While the standard 'foam' peanuts are made of polystyrene or polyurethane, they can be made of recycle plastic; and they are eminently reusable and recyclable. (i.e. they can be reused many times, and when they have deteriorated enough to no longer be usable, they can be recycled into plastic devices.

    But for true environmental friendliness, some companies make packing peanuts that are made of sorghum or corn starch, both plant products that are 100% environmentally-friendly and biodegradable. The mail-order electronics company Crutchfield uses biodegradable packing peanuts. (I just put them in my compost bin, and they had dissolved within two days.)
  • Frodo - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    New egg suck, I always read anandtech and made a user just to comment on this issue. I am a zipzoomfly buyer, bought there every computer I put and once I was changing my video card and I bought it from New egg becaus it was 20 dolars cheaper than in ZZF, it was and agp card that had a PCIE model too, I read the order 1000 times before hiting the buy button to make sure that i was buying the AGP one and a week later a PCIE card came shipped, after calling and explaining to 1000 persons of NE that the problem was their (they even had the order and it was for a AGP card) they said that if the card wasn't working they would change it for a new one but the sae model that beeing a PCIE. The people in customer support are robots just like the conveyor belts they have. I had to sell the card for much less and buy a card from ZZF. Im never buying again from NE no matter what.
  • Baked - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    I got a system that needs a CPU, hope I win something from newegg.
  • Missing Ghost - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    I still wish they will sell products to Canada!
  • HotBBQ - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    Why can't FL residents enter! Boooooo!!!
  • xscott967 - Tuesday, May 20, 2008 - link

    Just wish Newegg and the others would do a better job of shipping to AK, HI, APO and FPO addresses (hint-Amazon can do it). For many things the USPS flat rate priority box is soooo much cheaper.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now