
Inspection Status
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Customers are constantly setting higher
requirements regarding food safety. This means that production and
distribution companies in the food & beverage sector must have full
control over all incoming and outgoing goods. Quality controls are
essential, just as checks on quantity. You can manage this process
by assigning an inspection status to incoming and manufactured
goods. And to enable this process to run efficiently and effectively
you will need an IT system that supports and automates this process
wherever possible.
Foodware
The Food and Beverage industry is characterized
by specific requirements which can often not be catered for by a
standard company-wide solution. For this reason Microsoft and its
resellers have combined their many years of knowledge and experience
into Foodware®. In combination with Microsoft Dynamics® NAV,
Foodware® forms a fully integrated standard company-wide ERP
solution specifically for food and beverage companies. Foodware is
under continuous development and meets the latest industry
requirements. This creates a specific solution, where costs remain
manageable as the amount of customization is reduced to a minimum.
Foodware has been recognized by Microsoft with the highest quality
label: ‘Certified for Microsoft Dynamics’. Foodware consists of a
number of integrated solutions, one of which is Foodware -
Inspection Status. With this solution you can indicate the quality
of a lot of goods by assigning an inspection status.
The inspection status monitors the process
The inspection status functionality enables you
to monitor quality in the entire goods flow through your
organization. For example, when you post a purchase receipt or
production output, you will always want to conduct a quality check.
Once you have set this up, this inspection status will automatically
be assigned to every new lot. As a consequence, goods might be
blocked for various outgoing transactions until further quality
checks have been carried out, for example for sales orders or for
use in production. In Foodware - Inspection Status, you are free to
define the moment when the lots are to be inspected before they can
be used for various transactions. This also depends on how you have
defined the quality control steps. You have considerable flexibility
in defining which status is assigned to goods in an incoming
transaction. You can define this inspection status for a number of
attributes. For example per item, item category, all items, or for a
specific item attribute. Furthermore, you can define an inspection
status for an item from a specific supplier. So you see, you have
complete control over what happens to your goods.
The inspection status not only has an impact on
the logistics process, it also has an influence on the financial
process. For example, when you want to post a purchase invoice, the
inspection status of the lot concerned is checked. If the lot was
rejected, you will not be able to post the purchase invoice. Also
for planning and ATP (Available To Promise) purposes, the inspection
status is automatically taken into account.
In the lot number information screen you have
access to a number of inspection and quality functions. For example,
you can split the lot into sub-lots. Additionally, you can display
all changes made to a specific lot, assign a new inspection status,
or directly create a return order. For your convenience, all these
functions are available in one screen.
Random Samples
As in practice it is not possible to test all
incoming goods, Foodware - Inspection Status allows you to conduct
random samples as well as the standard checks. Based on supplier and
item attributes, the system can suggest quality controls be
performed on a random sample. For example: the goods from a
particular supplier have to be checked every fifth receipt. If the
result is negative, the next receipt must be checked as well. If,
after 20 receipts (four checks), all checks were positive, the
inspection frequency can be modified to one check per eight
receipts.
Control On Quality
The lot is not released in the system for use
in production, sales or other functions until inspection has been
successfully completed. The inspection status is not just there to
tag goods for inspection, it can also be used to block particular
lots which are in quarantine, are damaged or need to be repacked.
You can also assign a due date to an inspection status. So, for
example, lots that are in quarantine can be released for use after a
certain period. Additionally, a periodic quality control can be
defined for a product. If the periodic quality control function is
set, a lot will automatically be blocked after a period of time, and
will only be released again after quality control. The difference
between the periodic quality control and the inspection status in
combination with a due date is that the periodic quality control is
repeated whereas the inspection status with due date is an event
that occurs only once. This will give you structural control on
quality management within your organization. Besides all the ‘hard
attributes’, you can also assign a ‘soft attribute’ to an item, in
the form of a quality code.
Minimum Shelf Life at Sales
Your organization probably guarantees a
(customer specific) minimum shelf life (best before date (BBD)) for
goods delivered to your customers. In this case it is essential that
you have insight into the remaining shelf life of the products in
stock. You will then want to block items whose BBD has expired for
sales. You can do this quickly and correctly with Foodware -
Inspection Status. All lots for which the BBD has passed are no
longer available for sale. However, should the customer still want
to purchase this lot, you can make the lot available again for this
customer after which the lot can be sold. In addition, an available
item can be blocked for a specific customer.
Reports
Foodware - Inspection status consists of four main screens from which you can find the information relating to the inspection status you that you need on a daily basis. The first screen shows all lots and the corresponding inspection statuses. You can manage the whole process from this screen. There are two screens indicating the items per inspection status and one screen showing the availability per inspection status. Within these screens, you can set filters for item category, product group, item number, lot number and item attribute. The last screen is the detailed inventory overview. This screen shows the complete inventory. Here you can set filters for both quality and logistics attributes.
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Food Software
- Foodware: Software Home
- Foodware: NAV Product Overview
- Foodware: By Branch
- Foodware: Assembly
- Foodware: Business Essentials
- Foodware: Catch Weight
- Foodware: Consignment Management
- Foodware: Container Management
- Foodware: EDI
- Foodware: Excise Duty Management
- Foodware: Inspection Status
- Foodware: Non Conformances
- Foodware: Product Specifications
- Foodware: Quality Control
- Foodware: Radio Frequency (RFID)
- Foodware: Rebates
- Foodware: Scale Connection
- Foodware: SSCC Labels
- Foodware: Transport Management
- Foodware: NAV Architecture
- Foodware: NAV Implementation Plan
- Foodware: NAV Enhancement Plan
- Foodware: NAV Hardware Requirements
- Foodware: Success Stories
- Foodware: How to Buy
Software Products
- Microsoft Dynamics™ NAV
- e-Jewelry Software
- Non-Profit Software
- Food Software
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
- RFID Technology/Systems
- Jet Reports
- Business Snapshot Plus







