ColorCrest
All around shop helper.
Your most excellent form could use work order ID numbers.I was able to come up with something I think will work better for now.
Your most excellent form could use work order ID numbers.I was able to come up with something I think will work better for now.
I've been following Signs101 long enough the know it has taken some shops a very long time to research and maybe adopt an order management solution. The most basic reason is the software buyer is not familiar enough with some basic database fundamentals and the software vendors not helping their potential buyers enough with those most basics.We are currently gearing up (stoopid f*cking slowly) to move to squarecoil.
We are fortunate in that our previous setup had everything start with a number 0-9 based on departments. In this way you could bring up all paint supplies under say 1, vinyl under 2, so on and so forth. Problems show up on plenty of materials though, like who gets masking tape, 1 or 2? More annoying is the typical following identifier is a brand name. Then maybe a product number, with width as the end value. Further annoyance on our system is the need for sq/ft inventory, but god forbid you don't include the material width. It would be nice if the system accepted LF and figured out its own sq/ft usage, or if the ladies entering hand written list would do the math instead, but every time I list LF I get questioned, which is a waste of time.That naming convention fails to logically sort the materials by their names or description.
Didn't know any better at the time. We had someone here that was familiar with it from a previous job. I'll have to look into squarecoil.Why'd they choose that one (cyrious) over the others...
Besides the efficiency of using organized lists, there is another very important benefit of thoughtful naming conventions in which certain parts of the name might play rolls in calculations and formulas. For example, a material name might include its width and that width value helps determine the cost and price of a quoted line item by the linear feet required vs just printed square feet.It would be nice if the system accepted LF and figured out its own sq/ft usage,
does ANYONE actually like Cyrious? I hated it the 2.5 years i was stuck using it.Didn't know any better at the time. We had someone here that was familiar with it from a previous job. I'll have to look into squarecoil.
Your three posts make perfect sense. The naming convention is the most important part to successfully and QUICKLY using the software. The solve the square foot/Linear issue I have everything listed in square feet but the products that I often use as linear the have an L in front of them.Besides the efficiency of using organized lists, there is another very important benefit of thoughtful naming conventions in which certain parts of the name might play rolls in calculations and formulas. For example, a material name might include its width and that width value helps determine the cost and price of a quoted line item by the linear feet required vs just printed square feet.
Been there done that one before.Being a new employee at a small shop in a small town, I'd recommend sitting back, working, cashing your paycheck and not trying to change things. With a little more time you may come to find that they do things a certain way for a reason.
Care to say what you hated about Cyrious in particular?does ANYONE actually like Cyrious? I hated it the 2.5 years i was stuck using it.
Yes i see thisI've been following Signs101 long enough the know it has taken some shops a very long time to research and maybe adopt an order management solution. The most basic reason is the software buyer is not familiar enough with some basic database fundamentals and the software vendors not helping their potential buyers enough with those most basics.
Case in point; I just looked at SquareCoil's screenshots from their website. I will call out their list of materials as found in their estimating module as an example. Notice many of the material description / names begin with measurement values such as "1/8", etc. That naming convention fails to logically sort the materials by their names or description.
A fundamental process of any database is a routine along the lines of "find, list, sort." A user enters data into a certain blank field to find what they're looking for, the database finds any and all matching queries, then sorts the list in a logical manner such as alphabetically, etc. The demos of SquareCoil, SignTracker, ShopVOX, and probably others fail that simple task because they're playing fast and loose with leaving naming conventions for the end user to figure out.
In order to quickly setup a new software solution, it should be strongly recommended for users to first get their ducks in a row by organizing their current data such as the material list with their costs and specifications and product list with their components and prices ready to import into the new software. A spreadsheet (likely long) of each will quickly reveal organized data, or not, and missing data, if any. It is far too cumbersome to attempt entering so much individual sign shop data into most current solutions and especially web-based views. Importing from well formatted spreadsheets makes it much easier.
It's very common for sign shop to list nearly a thousand materials and hundreds of named products. (Some software vendors use the term "templates" as what are normally products so as far as sign making is concerned.) Understand many materials and products are just variations of their root making long lists more digestible.
A hint; Leave the measurement specification Psa appointment value of a material or product for the ending of the name and not the beginning.
Rough example...
SAV.Clear.Avery.1020 48"
SAV.Clear.Avery.1020 60"
SAV.Clear.Avery.2010 48"
SAV.Clear.Avery.2010 60"
SAV.White.3M.160C 48"
SAV.White.3M.160C 54"
SAV.White.3M.160C 60"
Another basic is; "One fact, one field." More later when I find some time.