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Inventory Management Services Tacoma WA

The right inventory management system makes your whole operation run more smoothly. It guards against unnecessary inventory loss and track your merchandise. Always having products in stock will help you retain customers and maintain a good impression. Some companies use Peachtree and Quickbooks for this purpose. Please scroll down to learn more about your options for inventory management in Tacoma, WA.

Carlile Transportation Systems
(253) 874-2633
2301 Taylor Way
Tacoma, WA
Gig Harbor Boat Yard, Inc.
(253) 851-7157
P.O. Box 387
Gig Harbor, WA
Todd's Flatbed Svc Inc
(253) 735-3260
2701 C St SW Ste B-13
Auburn, WA
Freight Taxi
(253) 447-2930
2824 142nd Ave E
Sumner, WA
Rick Ransom Enterprises
(253) 872-7454
22122 76th Ave S
Kent, WA
Blc Trucking Inc
(253) 272-6191
3401 Lincoln Ave
Tacoma, WA
Pacific Coast Express
(253) 216-0040
4430 B St NW
Auburn, WA
Igor S Trucking Llc
(253) 835-1439
3811 S 380th St
Auburn, WA
1-800 Got Junk?
(253) 926-0757
P.O. Box 1333
Graham, WA
Kooltek Transport
(253) 770-2653
14024 131st st east
Orting, WA
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Inventory Management

One word keeps cropping up in conversations about inventory management: seamless.

Business owners agree that if you have to do double duty entering data in different systems, you’re bound to mess up and cost yourself money and time fixing the problem.

That’s where inventory management software comes in, taking over the tedious work of tracking merchandise, alerting you when stocks are low, and integrating with such other business systems as accounting and payroll.

Kevin Wales, president of Just Moulding in Gaithersburg, Md., uses an integrated QuickBooks program for all his business systems.

“When we first started, when I would get a job, I would go to the lumberyard and buy whatever materials I needed for that job,” says Wales, who makes custom crown molding, chair rails, baseboard and other wood trim. “I’d get the next job, go to the lumberyard and get more material.”

This pattern continued until Wales realized he was buying the same material again and again. So he purchased several thousand feet of lumber and put it in his warehouse. He entered the transaction into QuickBooks to keep track of his stock.

Now, whenever Wales gets a new job, he records the data in QuickBooks, and the computer tells him whether he has enough material to do it. When his inventory gets low, it sends him a reminder to buy more.

“When you update accounts, it updates your system,” Wales says. “You have to account for the material.”

Author: Lynne Meredith Schreiber

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