ITrack Enterprise Overview

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1. What kind of parts can you enter into the program? When dealing with new parts, can you set min and max stock limits? Can you keep track of costs of each part? Can you enter more than one part at a time? What kind of information can you store about each part type and can you add pictures of each item? How are parts labeled in Enterprise?

Inventory is central to ITrack Enterprise, and therefore a great amount of thought has gone into how it is stored, displayed, searched, and entered. Enterprise is flexible and allows the user to enter pretty much anything into your inventory, even things that don't have a physical representation. However, inventory history is much richer on those items whose quantity on hand fluctuates over time.

Because of the flexible part type system, in which a list of part types segment the user's inventory, ITrack allows the entry of pretty much anything. Common examples of inventory include used parts, new (replenishable) parts, vehicles, vehicle whole units, cores, etc.

Because Enterprise facilitates such a varied catalog of inventory, it must also support the gamut of different business models and the part entry methods to facilitate them. For example, a user could start by entering a vehicle, then quickly tearing that vehicle down into a whole list custom list of component parts. In addition, the user could start from the part information screen, rapidly entering replenishable parts straight out of their vendor's catalog.

Many tools exist in ITrack Enterprise for rapidly entering, modifying, and managing large quantities of parts. For example, the Part Information screen can replicate an inventory record to other branches with just a couple clicks. As mentioned before, replenishable inventory records can be rapidly populated out of a purchase vendor's catalog (which can be easily imported using the data management screen). In addition, the copy part functionality allows the user to take an existing inventory record and quickly make a very similar record (making just those modifications that they want). Both of these functions allow an inventory manager to quickly create new inventory records based on existing templates. For modifying or comparing large quantities of inventory records at once, the part modification screen allows the user to send a whole list of search results to a spreadsheet-like interface where you can update a field on thousands of parts with just one click (or even export your inventory to MS Excel).

No matter how you go about creating inventory records, ITrack facilitates the entry of a lot of different pieces of information. Here are examples of some of the more advanced pieces of information that can be associated with a part.

  • Tag #: this field stores what you call a part, and it is what a part is called internally. Parts can be search by any information on the search screen, but Tag # has a special place as an inventory record's label. Many users define these numbers manually, while others set their Tag #'s to their default purchase vendor's part #, while yet others use the unique SKU of the inventory record. No matter how you like to refer to your parts, ITrack Enterprise can facilitate it.
  • Serials: ITrack facilitates serialized inventory and the separate tracking of individual serial #'s.
  • Q&A: ITrack allows the user to define a list of 'questions' based on part type, which can be prompts for any information. Then 'answers' can be defined for each part (for serialized parts, answers can be supplied separately for each serial #).
  • Pictures: the user can attach as many digital pictures to each part or vehicle as they want. These pictures can be viewed on the part, printed with the vehicle, seen in the search screen, and even uploaded automatically to [[1]] for online inventory advertisement.
  • Attachments: inventory records can have attachments associated with them, allowing manuals, coupons, rebates, or other technical documents to be accessible directly from the part or search.
  • Messages: messages are prompts that can be defined to show on various screens or print on various reports whenever that part is involved in the transaction. Example messages might be reminders to salesmen, or notes to pickers.
  • Pricing levels: used parts have 4 price levels and a cost, and one core charge. In addition, replenishable (aftermarket) parts can have core charges defined at each pricing level.
  • Reordering Information: replenishable inventory records can be marked as stocked or special order, have a reordering method defined (Min/Max or Historical), and can have advanced historical information defined (such as seasonal data, stocking point, stocking days, and a safety stock %).
  • And much more...


2. Can you inventory whole vehicles? Is there a limitation to the amount of information that you can enter on each vehicle? How many pictures can you attach to each vehicle? Can you track internal costs of each vehicle?

In ITrack Enterprise, the concept of teardown lists are somewhat central to the categorization of vehicle records in the system. Essentially, the user can create as many teardown lists as they want, and associate one with every vehicle make/model combination. Directly, teardown lists allow the user to choose a list of part types that are automatically created when vehicles of that type go through the teardown process. For example, a company might only take the hood, wheels, engine, and transmission off of a certain class of vehicle. Creating a teardown and associating it with those vehicles facilitates this process automatically. In addition to the teardown process, Q&A for vehicles is associated with teardown lists, meaning that vehicles inherit their 'questions' based on their teardown type.

Another concept closely tied to vehicles in ITrack Enterprise is the creation of whole unit records, which are the inventory half of a vehicle record. Once a whole unit record is created for a vehicle (you can set your global settings such that all vehicles will have whole unit records automatically), you can do work on the unit, associate purchase costs with the unit, and even sell the unit like a normal inventory item.

No matter whether you associate a vehicle with a whole unit or not, you can always define a wide variety of data for the vehicles records you enter. From the automatic VIN decoding using VIN Power, to teardown and purchase tracking, to internal status tracking, to cost tracking and performance, vehicles allow the user associate any data with a vehicle that they would want to track. Below are some of examples of data that can be associated with a vehicle record in ITrack Enterprise.

  • Stock #: similar to an inventory record's Tag#, a stock # represents the internal name of a vehicle, and can facilitate any naming scheme a company might require.
  • Limitless Damage/Notes fields: the user is able to record as much data as they want in the unlimited notes and damage fields. If you note it, we remember it.
  • Pictures: same as the inventory system, vehicles can have a limitless number of pictures associated with them. They can be viewed on the vehicles screen, the vehicle search, and they even show up for parts that came off of that vehicle. You can even hit the email button to send a vehicle spec sheet (with pictures) to a contact or customer.
  • Attachments: as with inventory records, vehicles can have attachments associated with them. Such attachments might be titles, scanned documentation, or sale correspondence.
  • Q&A: very similar to the inventory system, vehicles can have a user-defined list of 'questions' defined for each teardown list (which teardown list a vehicle uses is based off of its make/model).
  • Vehicle cost tracking: in order to properly track the performance of a unit in ITrack, purchase costs, related fees, and internal work/rebuild orders are all tracked for a vehicle. ITrack Enterprise supports both VCR (vehicle cost ratio) part pricing and time of sale %OfP (percent of price) pricing. In VCR pricing, a portion of a vehicle's cost is assigned to each of its components at the time of breakdown based on ratios configured in the teardown. In %OfP, at the time of sale, parts consume a portion of a vehicle's cost when they are sold, based on a percentage of the part's sale price. No matter how a company likes to track vehicle performance, ITrack can track, maintain, and report vehicle costs and sale performance.

3. Can you enter all of your vendors and their parts into the program? Is it possible to do an import from a vendor catalog? Can you automatically build purchase orders? Is there a tool that allows you to make an educated decision as to which vendor to buy a part from? Can you search for a vendor's parts even if you don't happen to have that part in stock?