Reorder Point

The Best Automation Workflows to Set Up in Business Central This Quarter

The Best Automation Workflows to Set Up in Business Central This Quarter

As we settle in with the quarter and the initial rush to plan is over, the reality of the daily grind has set in. For finance and operations teams using Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central (BC), this is the perfect time to pause and ask a critical question: Are we working for the system, or is the system working for us?  If your team still does any manual data crunching, copies and pastes invoices, or sends approvals around via email, then you’re leaving efficiency on the table.  Automation in Business Central is not about replacing the humans; it’s about freeing your team from repetitive administrative tasks and granting them time for strategy and growth. Here are the top-priority, high-impact automation workflows you should set up this quarter.  1. Finance: Automated Payment Reminders & Collections  Cash flow is the lifeblood of your business. But most accounting teams spend a considerable amount of time every week going over aging reports and composing emails to follow up on late payments.  The Workflow:  Establish in BC the “Reminder Levels” feature to automatically draft and send customers emails for reminders, based on due dates. How it works: You define the terms, such as sending a polite nudge at 7 days past due, a firm notice 14 days past due, and final demand at 30 days past due. BC calculates the interest/fees if applicable and sends the email out under the standard email logging setup.  2. Sales: The “Quote-to-Order” Conversion  Sales reps live in their inboxes or CRMs. When a client approves a quote, the last thing they want to do is log into BC and key up the data again to make an order.  The Workflow:  Use the “Make Order” functionality or integrate it with Power Automate to enable conversion. How it works: Once a quote status has been updated to “Accepted” within Business Central the quote will automatically be converted into a Sales Order. It can then trigger immediately a warehouse pick instruction.   3. Inventory: Smart Reorder Point Triggers  Stock-outs kill the sale; overstock kills cash flow. Finding this “Goldilocks” zone is usually a manual guessing game for purchasing managers.  The Workflow:  Deploy Replenishment Worksheets based on defined Reorder Points. How it works: You put in a “Reorder Point” for each SKU. When the inventory falls below that number, BC flags it automatically. Going a step further, you can create a Job Queue that will automatically create a Purchase Order suggestion by approval, per vendors’ lead times.   The ROI: You move from a reactive purchasing model-buy only when you run out-to a predictive one. This prevents stockout during peak demand and reduces excess inventory capital.  4. Operations: Bank Reconciliation using Feeds  Reconciliation of bank statements is usually the biggest time killer in finance. Matching items on your bank statement to items in your ERP system by hand is time-consuming and prone to errors. Establish the connection for Bank Feeds.   How it works:   Bank transactions are automatically fetched to BC every day. The system enables “Application Rules” for auto allocation of received payments to customer invoices and for outgoing payments to vendor bills.   5. Administration: Automated Approval Workflows  Is a purchase order above $5,000 signed off by the CFO or is a sales discount above 10% signed off by the VP? These signatures need to stop being recorded in Slack threads.  The Workflow:  Set up Approval Workflows in BC. “How it works: You set up a logic chain, like “If Document Type = Purchase Order and Amount > $5,000, Then Notify User = ‘CFO.’” The approver will receive a push notification within BC, which they can accept through the mobile app. The document will be “locked until approval is granted.””  Bonus – The Power Platform Integration  Although BC has native automation power in abundance, it reaches its true potential when integrated with Power Automate. For the current quarter, pick one “power user” workflow.  The Workflow:  Trigger: “CREATE: A new vendor is inserted into table ‘Vendors’.  Action Type: Automatically add the vendor to the “Vendor Onboarding” SharePoint List and place a message inside the Microsoft Teams channel alerting the procurement team to obtain insurance information.  Outlining a Business Plan      Rather than trying to automate all of it at once, you will inevitably overload your team and IT infrastructure. This quarter, pick one of the workflows from the above list where your business feels the most pain.  Map Process: List in detail how it is done currently.  Bottleneck: Identifying Where the Human Component Slows Things Down  Configure: You can make use of BC’s assistant guides or involve your partner to configure the workflow.   The Bottom Line:   Automation in Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central (BC) is NOT an “future” project; it is something you NEED to do each quarter. By doing these tasks today, you are not just saving time; you are laying the groundwork for the rest of the year. 
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Multi-Location Inventory: A Day in the Life of the Business Central Replenishment Engine

Multi-Location Inventory: A Day in the Life of the Business Central Replenishment Engine

Managing inventory across several warehouses, stores, and distribution centres is one of the most difficult tasks in today’s business. Inventory misalignment, transfer delays, unnecessary purchases, and lost sales can quickly damage the bottom line and customer satisfaction. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central solves this problem by using its own replenishment and planning engine, which continually assesses demand, availability, and geographical-based inventory to maintain your network in a balanced state. In this article, we will walk through how Business Central accomplishes multiple locations when it comes to inventory on a day-to-day basis. Demand and Inventory are Re-Evaluated As the orders begin to flow in, whether through e-commerce, POS terminals, or B2B sales, Business Central can record this demand and update the inventory automatically by location because of every sale, every shipment, and every return. The replenishment engine evaluates: Rather than being responsive in times of shortage, Business Central is proactive in determining possible risks of stock. Location-Level Planning Begins Business Central looks at inventory planning by location, not only on a global basis. This is very important in a multi-site environment. The system assesses: On this basis, Business Central establishes whether to meet the demand by: This is to ensure that there is no unnecessary buying considering that products already exist in other parts of the network. Planning Parameters Shape Intelligent Decisions Each replenishment proposal is based on the planning configuration of each item, which consists of the following: These enable Business Central to calculate the following: This makes the replenishment process predictable rather than a result of guesses. Actionable Recommendations are Generated When planners open the Planning Worksheet, they will see the following ‘Action’ suggestions: These recommendations already take into consideration what supply already exists, as well as transit inventory. In planning, requirements are reviewed and approved instead of calculated. Execution After approval, the following are created automatically by Business Central: For transferring, the system: For the purchases, it records: Each step is monitored, and it is quantified through inventory availability. Continuous Re-Planning As the shipment is sent, the following is calculated in Business Central: The planning engine is never static. It keeps changing based on what happened during the day. Why This Matters Without a Replenishment Engine, multi-location businesses typically face the following issues: Business Central eliminates these issues by keeping every location aligned to actual demand and available supply. The result is: Conclusion The Business Central replenishment and planning engine is a background process, but it certainly plays a central role in the flow of multi-location operations. Continuous assessment of demand and supply, along with location-level inventory, makes sure the right products are in the right place at the right time without the help of any person. For any organization managing inventory across several sites, this intelligent capability of planning is sure not to be helpful but indispensable.
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