companies are increasingly willing to invest in automation to respond to changing market conditions. E-commerce is more dependent than ever as the COVID-19 pandemic has changed how Americans shop. This means they have easy access to online shopping. According to a Ware2Go survey, 67% of Americans work from home.Some logistics operators are testing forklifts that can be operated remotely, allowing employers in tight labor markets to draw from a geographically broader pool of workers. A growing number of self-driving machines are shuttling clothing and sports equipment down warehouse aisles, pulling bins of groceries, cosmetics, and industrial parts from high stacks, and handing off goods to workers to help deliver orders faster.However, the pandemic outbreak and the lockdown worldwide have affected the warehousing and industrial activities, especially in countries such as the United States. With the rise of e-commerce in recent months, thousands of physical stores have closed. Successful deployments create safer jobs by reducing worker interaction while increasing productivity to meet growing e-commerce demands. The COVID-19 pandemic has led warehouse operators to consider accelerating their schedules to adopt automation and robotics.This has been causing existing technologies to become outdated quickly, and the need to be changed or upgraded regularly accounts for high costs. Rapid enhancement in automation technology by market vendors has led to new variations in these product ranges or software functionalities occurring more frequently.The rising number of warehouses and increasing investments in warehouse automation, coupled with the global rise in labor costs and availability of scalable technological solutions, have driven the market for warehouse robots across the region. Moreover, various factors have directly impacted the increasing adoption of warehouse robotics.The robot picks up a specific package from different palettes and creates its palette. Then, depending on the company's needs, there are ways to introduce robotization, for example, by setting up an automatic de-palletizing/palletizing system. WMS alone can increase productivity by 20% at ten times the cost of installing a warehouse. According to the Generix Group, automation initiatives should start with a well-optimized implementation of the Warehouse Management System (WMS).Following this trend, large companies such as Raymond Limited (an Indian textile company) and Foxconn Technology (a China-based supplier to major tech makers like Samsung) have replaced workers by incorporating automatic technology in their factories. By 2025, according to the Bank of America, 45% of all manufacturing will be carried out using robotic technology.The benefits of automating include improved customer service, scalability & speed, organizational management, and error reduction. The use of machines, control systems, and software to increase operational efficiency by using minimal human assistance in the warehouses for inventory movement is known as warehouse automation. The North America Warehouse Automation Market size is estimated at USD 6.86 billion in 2024, and is expected to reach USD 14.84 billion by 2029, growing at a CAGR of 16.70% during the forecast period (2024-2029). North America Warehouse Automation Market Analysis