In your example, are your kits stock items assembled via the Kit Assembly process from the components 001, 002, and 003, or are they non-stock items that only reflect the components on the shipment pick list? If you’re just looking for gross numbers for the component SKUs issued out, you can use the Inventory Transaction History inquiry to look at the period. If you use stock items you would look up SKU 001 and see Tran. Types of both Invoice and Assembly, the sum of the two being the total outbound. If you use non-stock kits, then looking up SKU 001 should only show Invoice transactions. You wouldn’t have an easy way to tie the components back to the specific kits, although this inquiry does show SO number.Hope this helps!
Thank you so much Laura! That did the trick.
You can attach pictures via the automated Receive and Putaway process in the Mobile App. You don’t even have to do the Release via the automated process, you just need to access the PR, add the file(s) and Save. You can then either Release in the automated process or via the regular Purchase Receipts tile. **Edit: in hindsight this may be a function only associated with the Warehouse Management add on, so you may not have this available with your particular version. It’s worth a look though**
Do the SKUs in question ship in multiples of the same box, or are they different sized boxes?Let me preface by saying we don’t currently use the Pick, Pack, Ship functionality as we found it cumbersome with no value-add, but we have had some success with two scenarios via the standard Shipment processing:Items that ship in multiples of the same box can have a decimal number in the packaging section, forcing the sold item to be packed into multiple boxes. For example, a 2-pack item would be packed .5 per box; see below example. The caveat would be items with non-terminating decimals (eg 3-pack, 6-pack etc), in how it would factor remainders. If they are different box sizes (or if you want to avoid the decimal problem), you could try carrying the boxes as unique Stock Items, and use a Non-Stock Kit to sell them together.Both of these scenarios can cause problems with ASNs though, although I think you’d have an easier time fixing the second than the first.Hope this helps!
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