Would numbers be good for stock control
Looking to setup some basic stock control, not sure if numbers would be any good?
Thanks
Lee
i work numbers-OTHER, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5)
Looking to setup some basic stock control, not sure if numbers would be any good?
Thanks
Lee
i work numbers-OTHER, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5)
Hello again.
Here is the 'Summaries' Sheet.
At the end of each day, Paste Values into the 'Daily total sales' table (from the 'Totals today' table on the 'Today' Sheet). The bottom row of 'Daily total sales' is a Footer Row which will maintain the formulas as you add more rows. Formula in Column B of the Footer Row is =SUM(B) Then Fill Right. Totals are for the current winter.
The 'Deliveries' table is where you record sacks delivered by your supplier. Totals are for the current winter.
The 'In stock' table shows sacks in stock. Conditional formatting will show red text on a yellow fill when stock of any kind falls below the Reorder level. Change the reorder level to suit your turnover and the delivery time by the supplier.
I have placed the Numbers document in my Dropbox to help you get started:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/pgo19l2mvbpbtbf/logboys.numbers
Lee wrote:
Thanks again Ian from a cold wet UK
Lee, please send some rain over here.
Regards,
Ian.
Hi Lee,
Ordering and selling by the sack makes this more straightforward. No need to calculate how many wheelbarrows equal one lorryload!
Here is a suggested layout of a Numbers document. This is one way. There are, no doubt other ways. Here is a screen shot of the Sheets Pane. Two Sheets. One Sheet to record individual sales per day. Another Sheet to keep a running total and show stock remaining.
Here is the 'Today' Sheet:
Column A of the 'Individual sales' table is a decimal time with a decimal point (.) instead of a colon (:). it won't work as a time value. It is just any easy way to keep some kind of record of when a sale was made. No big deal, I am trying to avoid the "quicksand" of how Numbers handles dates and times. Another way would be to use that column for the salesperson to insert their initials.
The 'Totals today' table adds the number of sacks sold. Formula in B2:
=SUM('Individual sales: sacks' :: B) then Fill Right.
At close of business each day, copy the three totals from the 'Totals today' table. Then delete today's sales on the 'Individual sales' table, ready for a fresh start tomorrow.
Go to the 'Daily total sales' table on the Summaries Sheet and Paste Values (not Paste, or that will insert the formulas, not the values).
I am having problems posting screen shots.I will try again in another reply.
Regards,
Ian
Hi logboys:
As an alternative, it seems to me that your needs might be meet using the Numbers Checking Register Template and making a few tweeks to it. Like a checking account, money in, money out, wood in, wood out. I came up with this...
I used the reorganize feature to sererate the types of wood as an example, but maybe not necessary as there is the Quantities on Hand table doing that. Conditional formatting used to turn red the quantities 600 or below and the Time to Reorder note.
MSwint
G'Day Lee,
How is the Old Dart?
If you are seeing something like this,
my guess would be that the formula has been accidentally deleted. Click once on one of the totals that do work,
and you will see it selects the column in the table above,
and this appears in the formula box'
The formula is =SUM('Individual sales: sacks' :: C)
Now copy (command c) then click once on cell B2 and paste. That will put the formula in and adjust to column B.
=SUM('Individual sales: sacks' :: B) Press enter. Done!
If you like, you can lock a table. Select the table by clicking on its icon in the Sheets Pane to the left.
Menu > Arrange > Lock. The faint x marks show it is locked,
You can unlock it if you want with Menu > Arrange > Unlock.
Another enhancement is to add extra columns to the Reorder Level table on the Summaries Sheet. Then you will get an alert for each of the three types of firewood.
Stock on hand from last winter counts as a delivery for this winter!
Happy Numbering!
Ian.
logboys wrote:
If in any way i am able to leave feedback for you please let me know where and how.
The community experts are incredibly helpful, aren't they! I think they're in it mostly for the satisfaction of helping others (unless the "Lounge" is really special). But, in addition to Facebook and Twitter, there is one small and quick thing you can do here for Ian. As the person who asked the question you have the sole power to mark helpful answers by hitting the 'This solved my question' and 'This helped me' buttons below replies, thus awarding reputation points.
SG
If that link does't work, try this
https://www.dropbox.com/s/i6ldus4vj4yh427/logboys%20Numbers%20%2709.numbers?dl=0
logboys wrote:
Looking to setup some basic stock control, not sure if numbers would be any good?
Thanks
Lee
I think so. You could conditionally format cells to alert you to conditions that are important, such as re-order points. You could compute how many units of finished goods could be made from existing stock, etc.
Jerry
Hi Lee,
I assume you are asking about stock control for a warehouse or shop that sells to customers. The short answer to your question is yes. Numbers can handle such data processing. It would be good to hear from you about your intended work flow. How will you enter the data? At the end of each day? After an inventory of your stock? From invoices? From a list of customer purchases?
More information will help towards a solution.
Regards,
Ian.
Hi Ian,
Thanks for your reply, we sell logs & kindling so we only have 3 products just varation in quantities. I am looking to be able to put in a stock quantity and it adjust when i add a sale to the spreadsheet.
I am new numbers and spreadsheets so your help here in the UK is very much appreciated.
Lee
Hi Lee,
An interesting and challenging problem. There are many ways to approach this with a spreadsheet. I am trying to get my head around the quantities involved.
If you buy logs by the truckload (lorryload in UK speak) and sell them in smaller quantities (for example a customer buys and takes a trailer load) how many trailers can you fill per lorryload? That will help you to calculate when to order in another lorryload.
If you buy kindling loose and sell it by the sack, how many sacks can you sell before you must buy (or chop) more kindling? How do you estimate the number of sacks if the kindling is loose? Or is the kindling the offcuts from logs?
You say you have three products. Kindling and logs are two, what is the third?
We could create a spreadsheet with either:
three Numbers tables, one for each product. Then a summary table to show remaining stock of each kind; or
a single sales table where you choose the product and quantity (perhaps from pop-up menus). Then three summary tables to pull each product into three lists showing stock remaining.
Either way, we can place an alert for you to order more stock. The power of Numbers lies in its ability to hold data in several small, discrete tables. Tables that do the work can be hidden from view. Tables that take input or show results can be on the "display" sheet. Linking between tables and sheets is easy.
Quantities sold will be important. For example a handful, sack, wheelbarrow, boot load, trailer load... and how they all relate to lorryloads or pre-packaged bags ordered in.
So many possibilities!
Thank you for exercising my brain. More information will lead us to a solution.
Regards from DownUnder,
Ian.
Evening Ian,
I would of given more details i didnt expect so much help,
We sell logs in net sacks, when i said we sell 3 products its kindling in nets, softwood in nets and hardwood in nets. We buy these from our supplier buy the pallet load normally 200 nets at a time.
Im looking to be able to have a tidy spreadsheet that i can book the stock into and then add the sales and it change stock levels according to sales? what do you think?
We are only a small business that runs through the winter months but im looking to keep good records for sales and stock and if we can do it all in one place like numbers just keeps it simple.
Thanks again Ian from a cold wet UK
Lee
WOW,
Ian you have really gone to town and showed how knowledgeable you are on this program, ive printed off what you have done and will have a read tomorrow and try it out.
Im collecting stock tomorrow so it will be great to get this setup and use live.
I cant thank you enough Ian and would happliy send you some rain over.
If in any way i am able to leave feedback for you please let me know where and how.
If you use facebook or twitter we would be more than happy to leave some comments for you if you let me know your details.
Will be in touch.
Lee
Hi Mate, hope all is well down under, you very kindly helped create an amazing stock control and sales sheet for my log business in the UK, not sure if you remember as you seem to help so many, only issue im having Ian is when i add a sale in the kindling cell is does not add up but the other ones for softwood and hardwood add up fine. Any ideas mate.
Thanks again Ian
Lee
I need an inventory control for a small clothes business, i get my clothes to different stores so I need to move them from my headquarters to the stores but not yet sell them, and then when they are sold I need to substract them from where they where.
I tried to go to your dropbox link but couldnt find it, Can you post it again please!
Thanksss
Hi Mandy,
I removed that document from my Dropbox as this is an old thread (November 2013) and I thought it was dead 😉.
How can I help you?
Replacing in my dropbox: https://www.dropbox.com/s/75n8ljtt4pn4y1k/logboys%202.numbers
That is a Numbers 2.3 document. It will open in Numbers 3.2
Two sheets: Today and Summaries. Let me know how you want to change it to suit your clothes business.
Regards,
ian
Would numbers be good for stock control