Warmoth
New Member
Honestly I’ve come up with a pretty good solution, but half the battle is getting everyone on board. On occasion, the system is circumvented due to years of doing it another way.How are you all currently tracking/managing orders?
This problem might be a somewhat simple fix by looking at how the order details are communicated (i.e. if there's a job ticket with all of the order details so that any employee can see the job instructions)
Up until about a year ago, every order became a handwritten note. Since the orders were processed by a single individual, many times not every detail was documented. Upon order completion, the notes (which included a brief description of the items and their prices) were actually given to the one who created invoices, to be deciphered. I shudder at the billing inaccuracies that must have occurred.
But I have introduced a Quote/pricing Spreadsheet that syncs with a Kanban board via Google scripts. I hesitate to call it a spreadsheet - it functions more like a program. It even has its own file system (New, Open, Save, etc.). When orders are entered (properly), they automatically become a card on the Kanban board. The card displays customer information, and the details of the items in the order. It even includes a checklist of item-specific tasks required for completion (print, laminate, plot, add grommets, etc.). Upon completion, these files are actually importable directly into QuickBooks. No more manually entering invoice data. I'm continually improving the process, and minimizing manual user input as much as possible. But certain things are trickier for it to communicate (ie: "Print these decals on the old printer otherwise the color is off").
As I said though, there’s ways around it. Sometimes the users will create a card manually, and get lazy when filling it out (back to the old ways of not including every detail) Or just not create a card at all.
Here's an example of the process. The spreadsheet does a lot more than what's visible. It estimates order completion time, item material cost and processing costs, order weight (for shipping), emails quotes to customers, has rudimentary (with big plans) inventory tracking. I could go on and on. This spreadsheet has been evolving for about 7 years. I only recently added the kanban board to the mix (6 months ago).