Real-Time Inventory Business Intelligence Across Your Enterprise
A major challenge for both small businesses and large companies when it comes to inventory management is having data stored in many different places. This makes it difficult to analyze data efficiently as there is no easy way to view it holistically. Their staff need a way to combine inventory data and visualize it. Perhaps they’re struggling with multiple systems with different terms for stock and inventory.
How the Enterprise Inventory Dashboard Benefits You
Our best-in-class Inventory System Enterprise Dashboard helps you take the guesswork out of business decisions. We accomplish this by allowing users to consolidate data onto one easy-to-read dashboard. With this Enterprise Inventory Dashboard, high-level users can visualize their data easily and detect trends.
Users can also simply click to reveal their Inventory at a glance. They can also create a report that tracks inventory as well as finished goods and finished products. This provides large companies with unprecedented inventory control even when managing many locations.
See Available Inventory Capacity
With our Visual Reporting tool, Inventory Analysts will be able to see the available capacity at their different locations. In other words, the high-level Analyst has complete visibility over the number of empty locations that exist in each location. This applies to final products as well as warehouses, stockrooms, and storage facilities.
Users can also customize the types of visualization for their data sources. This includes both bar graphs and pie charts based on user preference.
Analyze Your Enterprise’s Inventory Burn Rate
In our Inventory Tracking System, Inventory Burn Rate is defined as the rate of consumption for a specific inventory category. So, with this report, users can see what inventory is consumed at a high frequency. Based on this, Enterprise Dashboard users can order more of the items that are needed the most in advance. They can even include raw materials if needed.
The report allows users to see a 10-day, 3-day, and 1-day report to assist in making better decisions. A good example would be deciding to transfer Inventory from one overstocked facility to another understocked one.
Check Subscription End of Life
As a high-level user of our Enterprise Inventory Management System, you will most likely be managing multiple standalone systems. High-level users will be able to see how much time is left until the end of their subscription. This is important so users can pre-plan budgeting for each warehouse.
Inventory Summary
Want to know the Inventory levels that your company has available for consumption or for use? Our Visual Report is simple, straight forward, and designed to show Enterprise users the total quantity on hand of certain Inventory items. Now, the Inventory Analyst will know exactly which quantities are available. Warehouses or stockrooms can then be mobilized to promptly retrieve them.
Issuance per Item Report
This report that our inventory management system creates can provide many benefits to business leaders. A high-level Inventory Analyst can see an overview of how much inventory they have issued per stock item. The overview assists in demand planning and aids accounting purposes. The report also makes predictions based on the previous issue transactions.
This is very helpful for users at a high-level to forecast how many days they have left of inventory stock. Consider the following example. An Inventory Analyst at a hospital can use the graph to track the stock levels for supplies used every day.
Analyzing Inventory Usage by Time Period
Users can create a balance sheet for items like surgical gowns, face masks, and bottles of hand sanitizer. They can use this to see all that they have issued in one week. Based on the previous issuance, the system will predict how many days the user has left until they need a restock.
Inventory on Hand by Category
With this visual report, the high-level Inventory Analyst gets a deep understanding of each category of Inventory on hand. For example, an analyst at a hospital can use the graph to view inventory levels in the “face mask” category. It also provides a form of data visualization regarding which warehouse extra supplies can be found. This type of inventory refers to N-95 masks, surgical masks, and cloth masks.