Slip Sheets Vs Pallets For Labor Cost—how To Model?

Table of Contents

Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 5,000
🚚 Save BIG on Truckload orders!

To model Slip Sheets vs Pallets for labor cost, don’t overthink it. You’re basically comparing:

Total labor minutes per 1,000 cases moved (or per load) under each method.

Then convert minutes → dollars.

Below is a clean, plant-friendly model you can run in Excel/Sheets in 15 minutes.

 

Step 1: Pick your unit of comparison

Use one of these (don’t mix them):

  • Per palletized load (best for shipping)

  • Per 1,000 cases (best for volume normalization)

  • Per truckload/container (best for freight + dock time)

I recommend Per Truckload and Per 1,000 Cases.

Step 2: Map the process steps (labor touches)

You’re measuring labor, so model the touches.

Pallets (typical flow)

  1. Stage empty pallets

  2. Build/load pallet (cases placed)

  3. Add top sheet/tier sheets if used

  4. Wrap/strap

  5. Move to dock

  6. Load trailer

  7. Receiver unload + put-away (often not your labor, but matters if you’re modeling total supply chain labor)

Slip sheets (typical flow)

  1. Stage slip sheets

  2. Build/load unit on slip sheet

  3. Wrap/strap

  4. Move to dock

  5. Load trailer

  6. Receiver unload using push/pull (time may differ)

Key difference: pallets have “pallet handling” labor (moving/staging pallets, dealing with broken pallets, pallet disposal/returns). Slip sheets trade that for push/pull handling.

Step 3: Define your labor inputs (what you actually measure)

You only need a few variables to get a reliable model.

Core variables (use these in your sheet)

A) Labor rate (loaded)

  • $/hour fully loaded (wages + burden).
    Example: $28/hr, $35/hr, whatever your real number is.

B) Handling time per unit (minutes)
Measure these with a stopwatch for 10 reps and average:

Pallet method

  • Minutes to stage 1 empty pallet (or per pallet built)

  • Minutes to wrap/secure 1 pallet (manual or machine)

  • Forklift minutes to move 1 pallet from build → dock

  • Forklift minutes to load 1 pallet into trailer

Slip sheet method

  • Minutes to stage 1 slip sheet (usually tiny)

  • Minutes to wrap/secure 1 slip-sheet load

  • Forklift minutes to move 1 unit to dock

  • Forklift minutes to load into trailer

  • (If you unload internally) push/pull minutes per unit

C) Volume variables

  • Cases per pallet (pallet method)

  • Cases per slip-sheet unit (slip sheet method)

  • Units per truckload

  • Loads per week/month

Step 4: Build the model (simple formulas)

1) Convert labor rate to $/minute

$/minute = LaborRatePerHour / 60

Example: $30/hr ÷ 60 = $0.50/min

2) Pallet labor minutes per truckload

PalletMinutes = UnitsPerTL × (StagePallet + Wrap + MoveToDock + LoadTrailer)
(Each input in minutes)

Then:
PalletLaborCost = PalletMinutes × $/minute

3) Slip sheet labor minutes per truckload

SlipMinutes = UnitsPerTL × (StageSlip + Wrap + MoveToDock + LoadTrailer + (PushPullUnload if applicable))

Then:
SlipLaborCost = SlipMinutes × $/minute

4) Normalize to cost per 1,000 cases

CostPer1kCases = (TotalLaborCostPerTL / CasesPerTL) × 1000

This lets you compare apples-to-apples even if slip sheets change how many cases fit per load.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Step 5: Add the “real world” labor adjustments (the stuff that swings results)

These are the big swing factors that make slip sheets win or lose.

Adjustment #1: Pallet handling overhead

Add a line for pallet overhead minutes/cost:

  • time spent receiving pallets

  • time spent sorting/repairing broken pallets

  • time spent clearing nails/splinters

  • time spent dealing with pallet stack storage

  • time spent on pallet disposal or returns

Even if you can’t measure perfectly, estimate a monthly hour figure.

PalletOverheadCost = OverheadHoursPerMonth × LaborRatePerHour

Allocate that over cases shipped:
Overhead per 1,000 cases = (MonthlyOverheadCost / MonthlyCases) × 1000

Adjustment #2: Dock delay / detention risk

Slip sheets can increase unload time if receivers aren’t equipped or trained.

Model this as expected value:

ExpectedDetentionCost = ProbabilityOfDelay × AverageDelayHours × DetentionRatePerHour

That might be $0 for internal DCs, and meaningful for certain customers.

Adjustment #3: Training + learning curve

Slip sheets often have a short learning curve.

Model it as a one-time cost amortized over months:

TrainingCost = TrainingHours × LaborRatePerHour
Amortize:
MonthlyTrainingCost = TrainingCost / MonthsToAmortize

Adjustment #4: Equipment cost (push/pull attachment)

Not labor, but it changes labor minutes.

You can model it separately or roll it into “cost per 1,000 cases.”

MonthlyEquipCost = (AttachmentCost / UsefulLifeMonths) + MaintenancePerMonth

If the push/pull saves labor minutes, it often pays back fast.

Step 6: Create your output summary (what you present to leadership)

In one table, show:

  • Labor cost per truckload (pallet vs slip)

  • Labor cost per 1,000 cases (pallet vs slip)

  • Sensitivity: what happens if push/pull is 20% slower/faster

  • Sensitivity: what happens if cases per load increases 5–10% with slip sheets

The two questions your model must answer

  1. Does slip-sheeting reduce labor cost per 1,000 cases?

  2. Does it reduce total cost per 1,000 cases after detention/training/equipment?

If the answer is yes on both, it’s a green light.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

A plug-and-play spreadsheet layout (copy this structure)

Inputs

  • Labor rate ($/hr)

  • Cases per pallet

  • Pallets per truckload

  • Cases per slip-sheet unit

  • Slip units per truckload

  • Stage time (pallet) minutes

  • Wrap time (pallet) minutes

  • Forklift move time (pallet) minutes

  • Trailer load time (pallet) minutes

  • Stage time (slip) minutes

  • Wrap time (slip) minutes

  • Forklift move time (slip) minutes

  • Trailer load time (slip) minutes

  • Push/pull time (if applicable) minutes

  • Pallet overhead hours/month

  • Monthly cases shipped

  • Probability of delay (slip)

  • Avg delay hours

  • Detention $/hr

  • Push/pull attachment cost + life (months)

Calculations

  • $/minute

  • Labor minutes per TL (pallet)

  • Labor cost per TL (pallet)

  • Labor cost per 1,000 cases (pallet)

  • Same for slip

  • Overhead allocation per 1,000 cases

  • Expected detention per 1,000 cases

  • Equipment amortization per 1,000 cases

  • Total cost per 1,000 cases (pallet vs slip)

Output

  • Savings per 1,000 cases

  • Savings per month (based on monthly cases)

  • Payback months (if equipment required)

Bottom line

Model it as minutes → dollars → per 1,000 cases, then add:

  • pallet overhead labor

  • detention probability

  • training curve

  • equipment amortization

If you want, tell me:

  • your labor rate

  • cases per pallet today

  • pallets per truckload

  • monthly case volume

  • whether receivers have push/pull

…and I’ll plug realistic example numbers into the model so you can see how the math plays out.

Share This Post