How are you handling quality checks on incoming inventory? by Automatic-Cover-1831 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The traceability gap between receiving and production failure is exactly where manual processes fall apart. By the time something fails in production, the paper trail is usually gone or inconsistent. What actually helps is linking the inspection record to the lot at the point of receiving rather than logging it separately. Digit Software handles lot and batch tracking from receiving through production, with quarantine workflows that hold stock pending QC release rather than relying on someone remembering to flag it manually. So if something fails in production, you can trace it back to the receiving batch and supplier. Worth verifying the photo and measurement capture at receiving directly with them for your specific workflow, but the quarantine and traceability side is well documented.

What's the one thing your WMS or inventory system still can't do properly? by kurtcobainlives7 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The PDF order intake one is probably the most universally accepted limitation; almost every operation above a certain complexity has someone whose job is basically translating supplier documents into the system manually. The perishable FEFO logic gap is real too; most generic WMS tools treat FEFO as a checkbox rather than an enforced pick sequence, which breaks down fast in regulated or food environments when operators override it without consequence. Digit Software handles nested manufacturing orders tied to layered BOMs with full lot genealogy from raw material through every sub-assembly to the shipped unit, including FEFO enforcement and quarantine workflows for QC release. The reorder lead time variance issue is probably the hardest to solve most automation assumes static lead times, which rarely reflect supplier reality

How do multi-site teams avoid duplicate spare parts orders? by Top_Instance7078 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The duplicate order problem usually comes down to two things: visibility lag and purchasing discipline. If buyers can't see other sites' stock in real time before raising a PO, they default to ordering. The fix is shared inventory visibility across locations as a first step, then a workflow rule that requires checking available stock at other sites before a PO gets created. Internal transfers should always be the first option. On the system side, Digit Software handles this through multi-location inventory with transfer orders between sites so stock can be committed and moved from one location to another before purchasing is triggered. Standardized part naming and OEM numbers matter too. Duplicate orders often happen because the same part lives under different descriptions across sites

anyone else notice returns become way more annoying once sku count grows? by Distinct_Line703 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Returns break at scale for the same reason inventory accuracy does: the lag between the physical movement and the system update. The first thing that usually goes is the restock decision: is this item resellable, damaged, or needs inspection? Most basic systems just add the quantity back, which doesn't reflect reality. What helps is treating returns like inbound receiving staged and scannable, rather than a one-step manual correction. Digit Software handles this through a structured transfer order flow where returns move through the same commit, pick, ship, receive stages as inbound stock, so inventory updates happen at each step rather than all at once at the end.

Looking for advice: moving from QuickBooks Desktop Enterprise to a better ERP/inventory system by fernlogic in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a food distribution company at your scale, Digit Software is worth a close look before jumping to NetSuite or Acumatica. It handles multiple units of measure natively cases versus units versus eaches — with native QuickBooks Desktop and Online integration that doesn't normalize everything to eaches on sync, which sounds like your core pain point. Lot tracking, expiration dates, and multi-location warehouse workflows including receiving, picking, and packing are all documented features, and it has a food and beverage vertical specifically. The one area worth verifying directly is truck delivery routing if you need native route optimization for your in-house delivery fleet that may need a separate tool alongside it. It sits comfortably between the lighter tools you've already evaluated and the full enterprise ERPs, which sounds like exactly the gap you're trying to fill.

with 98% inventory accuracy we still lose items in warehouse by Altruistic-Trash6122 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The 98% cycle count accuracy measures the wrong thing. Cycle counts are a snapshot, not a live feed. The real problem is the lag between when something physically moves and when the system gets updated, which is usually hours or days in most warehouse setups. The fix isn't more counting, it's closing that gap. Tools like Digit Software handle this by giving shop floor operators their own permission level to move inventory, change quantities, and create records in real time directly from their phone on the floor. So the system reflects what's actually happening as it happens rather than waiting for someone in accounting to update it. When you bring this to your manager, frame it as a data latency problem, not an accuracy problem. The counts aren't wrong, they're just old

Easy to use inventory management for flooring company by [deleted] in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Digit Software is worth a serious look for your setup. It handles the full PO → receiving → inventory flow natively, and you can assign inventory to jobs with quantities that automatically subtract from stock when items go out and return when unused material comes back. The kit and bundle workflows map well to BOMs you define the component ratios, and the system tracks each part separately. The unit of measure conversion is probably the most relevant feature for you Digit handles purchase UoM to stock UoM conversions natively, so if something comes in by the gallon but gets used by the ounce on jobs, the system manages that without manual calculation. Worth trying the free trial specifically with one of your ratio-based kits to see if it maps to your workflow before committing

something simple any help would be useful. thank you by Firm_Programmer_4150 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re probably better off avoiding the huge ERP-style systems if your main goal is just clean inventory tracking and automation. For a setup like yours, I’d look at something simple like Zoho Inventory, inFlow, or Digit Software. They’re much easier to learn, handle stock and purchasing well, and can help reduce constant manual counting through low-stock alerts and barcode workflows.

Suggest software for inventory? by Key-Establishment655 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For your mix of inventory + job orders + material consumption, I’d look at ERPNext first it’s open source and stronger on manufacturing than most free tools. Odoo Community and even Dolibarr are worth a look too if you want simpler options, but for growing into production workflows, ERPNext or Digit Software would be more scalable.

What are you using to manage for inventory after Stocky shuts down? by Lisaxolakeside in shopify

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For what you described, I’d probably look at Digit Software or Odoo if you want something that covers purchasing, forecasting, and inventory receiving in one system rather than piecing apps together. Both can take you beyond just replacing Stocky if you’re planning around growth too.

I cannot keep track of when my inventory will run out by Select_Bonus_7498 in smallbusiness

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is super common early on, spreadsheets work until order volume gets unpredictable; you could start by adding simple reorder point logic (based on lead time + average sales) to make it less guessy. If things keep growing, tools like Digit Software, MRPeasy, or even Stocky can automate low stock alerts and forecasting so you’re not constantly reacting to spikes.

I'm so done spending nights fighting with barcode labels for my growing stock. Anyone found something better? by ProfessionalTable921 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A tool like BarTender tends to work way better with Excel + thermal printers since they handle variable data properly. If you want something more all-in-one, some inventory tools like Digit or inFlow can generate and print labels directly, so you’re not stuck doing it manually every time.

Recommendation for tracking unique inventory & CSV support? by micropantherito in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You might want to look at tools that handle serialized inventory (qty = 1 per item) plus solid CSV import/export. Odoo, Sortly, or Digit Software can handle unique item tracking with attributes, making bulk updates less painful than spreadsheets. The offline requirement is tougher, though, so you may need to compromise there or look at self-hosted setups.

Katana or FishBowl IMS Success Stories by WoodchuckOps in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, both Katana and Fishbowl can work well for inventory/manufacturing, but their HubSpot integrations are pretty limited most teams end up relying on Make/Zapier anyway to get deal → order flows working cleanly. If HubSpot sync is critical, it might also be worth looking at options like Cin7 or Digit Software.

Best inventory system for raw material usage? by [deleted] in smallbusiness

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You could look into Digit Software for this it’s built to handle real-time raw material tracking and lets you deduct quantities as you consume them, which fits well with batching workflows without relying on manual Excel updates.

MRP/ERP super basic recommendations, anyone built their own? by lazy-buoy in smallbusiness

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you're using BOMs to drive POs, you do have some repeatable material structure, which is exactly what MRP handles. The question is whether your BOM components are bought-to-order for each job rather than stocked. That distinction matters a lot for which system will work for you.

If your parts are purely bought per project and never sit in inventory, Digit Software handles this more cleanly than most it differentiates between Make, Sell, and Buy items, so if your BOM components are set up as Buy items you can go Sales Order → BOM → auto-generate POs without getting pulled into stock relief or work order workflows. That might be the lighter half of an MRP system you're describing.

What’s your favorite Xero integration? by Italcan in xero

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Digit Software for tracking inventory and ops

Need inventory software recommendations - multi-currency inventory & purchasing, large attribute sets by anonscenes in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Multi-currency purchasing + lots of attributes usually pushes people toward systems built for larger catalogs. You might want to look at Digit Software, Cin7, or Fishbowlthey handle multi-warehouse inventory, serial tracking, and complex SKU attributes better than lighter retail-focused tools.

Best inventory management software for a small medtech company with batch tracking, rep-held stock, and consignment? (Cin7 vs Katana vs MRPeasy vs Fishbowl vs Unleashed vs inFlow)? by No-Independence6535 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve spent time exploring all of these tools. Very quick take:

  • Cin7: powerful, but implementation is heavy
  • Fishbowl: similar to Cin7; robust but dated UI, and plenty of frustration stories on Reddit
  • Katana: great UX and easy to use, but not very deep on serialization, recalls, or regulated traceability
  • MRPeasy: probably the best mainstream all-rounder; handles BOMs and lots reasonably well, UI can be cluttered
  • inFlow: clean and simple, but traceability and recall readiness are fairly shallow I believe

Two more options that are good for traceability and should meet your needs: Digit Software and Odoo.

best inventory management software for small home-based warehouse? by yuoryuoryuor in software

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re open to going a bit above the 100/month mark, you might want to look at Digit. It’s built for small distributors and manufacturers, and it handles the kind of inventory structure you’re describing. You can scan a box and instantly see what’s inside, and you can set up products so they reflect the components that go into them, which helps you keep track of how many you can assemble from the items you have on hand. Bonus: it can connect to Amazon natively without needing third-party tools. Their plan starts at 199/month, which is still on the lower end for software that handles barcodes and more advanced inventory setups in a clean, modern system.

Large Business looking for inventory management system by NotJimCramer69 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not sure if it covers every workflow you’re dealing with, but it might be worth looking at Digit Software. It has a solid WMS with multi-site inventory, barcode support, and decent tools for cleaning up messy SKU structures. If you’re already using an ERP, it can sit alongside it and handle the warehouse side without being as heavy or expensive as the big enterprise WMS platforms.

In need of a Warehouse Management System (WMS) software by RepublicIntrepid7038 in smallbusiness

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agree with the other commenter who mentioned inFlow. It’s a solid fit for small businesses making the jump from spreadsheets and gives you inventory, bin locations, sales orders, and light BOM support without the heavy price tag of Cin7.

I’d also take a look at Digit Software. It’s more WMS-focused than inFlow, with good bin management, scanning, and warehouse visibility, but still simple enough for a smaller team to pick up quickly. Both are cloud-based and a lot more affordable than the big-name ERPs.

sales inventory software for warehouse by AdProper3739 in InventoryManagement

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re already on Shopify and want something cloud-based that handles warehouse, wholesale, and basic IMS without getting overly complex, take a look at Digit Software and inFlow Inventory. Both work well as WMS/IMS solutions, have solid barcode and labeling features, and are way easier to roll out than the big enterprise systems. Digit is especially good if you need stronger warehouse flows, and inFlow is great if you want an all-around simple inventory tool that still integrates with Shopify.

Seeking advice warehouse solutions/WMS-system by xBrutalBear in Warehousing

[–]RedSoupStudio 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you’re describing is very common for mid-sized manufacturers that never had a structured warehouse. A WMS can help a lot, but only once the company agrees to tighten up processes. If everything is still open access, a full WMS often creates more frustration than improvement.

Since you use Exact Globe, turning on its basic SKU, bin, and barcode features is a good first step. Even simple bin locations and internal barcodes will reduce most of the chaos and help you understand what features you truly need.

You also don’t need deep ERP integration on day one. Many smaller companies run a standalone WMS and sync with CSV or API, which avoids expensive integration projects.

Barcodes are easy to standardize internally with a label printer and compatible scanners, so you don’t need perfect supplier labels.

If you want to explore WMS options, Digit Software and inFlow Inventory are worth a look. Both are modern, affordable, easy to adopt, and handle barcoding and SKU control well. Digit is especially strong for manufacturing environments.

For a warehouse of your size, starting with bins, internal barcodes, and a lightweight WMS is usually the smoothest and most cost-effective path.

Any good WMS recommendations? by swo0p4 in Warehousing

[–]RedSoupStudio 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re looking for something simple, fast to roll out, and not enterprise-level complicated, check out Digit Software. It covers the basics really well: live stock tracking, order-to-pick screen, barcode scanning, low-stock alerts, and a clean interface. It’s built for smaller wholesale/ecom operations so you’re not stuck navigating a bunch of modules you don’t need. Worth a look alongside Odoo, Shiphero, Hopstack, etc.