Warehouse Associate
LAKE CHARLES, LA 70601
Posted: 1/23/2024
Job Description
You will be responsible for processing orders, receiving and stocking inventory, and maintaining a clean and organized warehouse. The ideal candidate will have a strong work ethic, attention to detail, and the ability to work in a fast-paced environment.
Responsibilities:
- Process orders accurately and efficiently using warehouse management systems
- Receive and stock inventory in a timely manner
- Maintain accurate inventory records
- Prepare orders for shipment
- Operate material handling equipment
- Maintain a clean and organized warehouse
- Comply with company policies and procedures
- Other duties as assigned
Requirements:
- High school diploma or equivalent - Previous warehouse experience preferred - Ability to lift up to 50 pounds - Ability to work in a fast-paced environment - Strong attention to detail - Basic computer skills - Ability to operate material handling equipment - Ability to work independently and in a team environment - Ability to stand for extended periods of time
To apply for this position, click the link below or contact the local office at (337) 252-0240
APPLY NOWWhat's Happening
World Cup 2026 Staffing: What Employers Need to Know
When 6.5 million fans pour into North America for the FIFA World Cup, who staffs everything around them? The answer is reshaping the labor market in a dozen U.S. cities right now — and it reaches far beyond the stadium. If your business operates in a host market, World Cup 2026 staffing pressure is already competing for the same workers you rely on. Here's what's happening, why it touches every industry, and how to keep your crews full through the busiest summer in years.
Read more >>Summer 2026 Event Staffing: Coverage When It Counts in Six Host Cities
Match Week 2026 is heading to Kansas City, Miami, Dallas, Houston, San Francisco, and Seattle — and if you run a hotel, a venue, a facility, or an event-services company in one of those cities, the headline isn't the matches. It's the squeeze. When hundreds of thousands of visitors land in a single market over a few weeks, every operation that touches them feels it at once. Front desks get slammed. Banquet floors run short. Parking lots, loading docks, and event corridors need bodies that didn't exist on the schedule last year. And the labor pool you normally pull from? It's getting recruited away by everyone else trying to staff the same surge. This is the part most operators underestimate. The crowds are predictable. The labor gap that comes with them is what catches teams flat-footed.
Read more >>The 2026 Labor Shortage Is Stalling Projects — Here's How to Staff Through It
Your next project isn't behind because of weather. It's behind because you can't staff it. That's the reality facing operations leaders across construction, warehousing, and logistics in 2026. The work is there. The demand is there. What's missing are the skilled, reliable people needed to do it — and the gap is widening every quarter. Here's what the numbers say, and what they mean for your business.
Read more >>