In the past, keeping track of the manufacturing cycle would have relied on legacy methods such as notations in an Excel spreadsheet or emails sent to managers and supervisors.
Posted by John Shepperson | Nov 26, 2014 2:00:00 PM
In the past, keeping track of the manufacturing cycle would have relied on legacy methods such as notations in an Excel spreadsheet or emails sent to managers and supervisors.
Topics: ERP, sage erp x3, john shepperson, oates co, manufacturing, distribution, database, legacy software
Factory and plant supervisors who are responsible for moving product down the line to warehousing and then through the distribution chain require an accurate way to identify both products and routes, which is very difficult to do manually.
Sage 100 ERP’s bar coding system, however, can help.
Topics: ERP, Sage, enterprise resource planning, Sage 100 ERP, john shepperson, oates co, manufacturing, warehouse, distribution, database, bar codes, bar coding
If your fixed assets aren’t recorded, monitored, and disposed of properly, fixed asset accounting can be an inefficient process. Not keeping track of serial numbers and warranty information on those fixed assets can cause many problems when it’s time to do the books.
Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Word are no longer the go-to software programs for fixed asset management. Many operational supervisors are locked into these antiquated methods, from paper files to notations in notebooks to Excel spreadsheets to Word documents. Those things are apt to be disorganized and crowded with data, making it difficult for decision makers to find what they need when they need it.
Topics: sage erp x3, fixed assets, fixed asset accounting, Sage X3, database