EdgeERP is ultimately flexible and as easy as possible to combine with other systems.
This is due to its very common platform, standardized SQL and in its approach generally.
Some specific features of note include multi-currency, multi-language, multiple warehousing, banking,
recurring orders, report writer and sales analysis tools, payments and collections, physical inventory count facilities,
assemblies and kitsets using bill of materials, serial, batch and lot control of inventory, discounting and price breaking,
tremendous control over support information such as payment methods, powerful tax setup to handle practically anything without modification,
extensively controllable user security to all areas of the system.
Features List by Area
Inventory Including Services
- Unlimited number of
warehouses (stocking locations), stock quantities are maintained for
an unlimited number of locations.
- Selling prices for a stock
item can be set for each sales type defined in any (and all)
currency (ies) allowing great pricing flexibility. Pricing can also
be set specific to an individual customer account or even a specific
customer branch.
- Automatic back ordering.
Sales orders yet to be delivered can be automatically back ordered
at the time of invoicing or the balance of the order canceled as
appropriate.
- A history of stock
movements is maintained by stock item.
- Allows Dummy (service)
stock items which can be invoiced, priced, costed but with no stock
record maintained for items such as labour or services.
- Kit-set parts can be
defined. An order for a kit-set part explodes into the components
defined for the parts at the predefined quantities as extended by
the number of the kitset item ordered all priced individually. These
component quantities are then available on the order for
modification by the user.
- Assembly parts can be
defined in a similar way to kitsets. These parts exist only for
ordering, pricing, invoicing and sales analysis. No stock balance is
maintained, instead the quantities of the components are updated in
proportion to the quantity defined in the assembly.
- Invoice and credit note
inquiries are linked to stock movements so the detail of items sold
on an invoice can be queried calling up the actual invoice or credit
note that caused the stock movement.
- Standard cost maintained
and valuation reports.
- Inventory usage by month
inquiry by location and over all locations.
- Inventory planning report
showing the last 4 months and the current months sales –
including sales of assembly components.
- Receiving
inventory against purchase orders creates journals in the general
ledger to reflect the increase in stock value and the amount owing
to a supplier.
- Stock
transfers to other inventory locations can raise transfer dockets.
- Re-order
quantities can be maintained.
- Inventory
adjustments can create general ledger entries to reflect write on or
off of stock value.
- Inventory cost
changes can create general ledger entries to reflect write on or off
of stock value.
- A stock taking
system allows business to continue recording system stock quantities
at the time of counting – adjustments created based on these
quantities and the sum of all quantities entered as counted for the
item. General ledger integration creates the necessary journals to
reflect the changes to stock values.
- Controlled
items – allow referencing of each stock movement to the
bundles/batch references.
- Serialiased
inventory allows controlled items to be in units of one. Ie a
reference for each individual item.
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