SYSPRO supports functionality to move inventory
between warehouses within one company.
In addition to Goods In Transit,
supply chain transfers can be utilized.
Supply chain transfers are a type of sales order that can be
captured from a requesting warehouse against a supply warehouse.
Instead of selecting a customer,
select a type of order
and select Supply Chain Transfer.
From here,
you will indicate the source warehouse into which the
goods would be requested from and the target warehouse to
which the goods would be shipped to or received into.
This is where you will capture the required items
that you wish to place on order or to receive in.
Here we are capturing the quantity of an item and saving the details.
We will also enter the ship date and click save once again.
The line order is saved here and we will save the order.
You will also notice additional options are available
as part of the document print functionality.
You would print the supply chain transfer document here.
This document puts the goods into in transit.
It also gives the shipping warehouse documentation to use as
a packing list to ship the goods to the requesting warehouse.
Once they are in transit,
you can view the quantity that is in transit via the Inventory Query.
Against warehouse E,
you are going to see that 10 units are in transit now.
Once the goods are shipped and delivered to the requesting warehouse,
a transfer in transaction will be processed,
launching the Goods In Transit facility,
similar to what you have seen in the Goods In Transit review.
You are going to enter the receiving warehouse.
You will see the supply chain option selected,
meaning that supply chain transfer orders
are going to be included in this review.
We will start the review.
You can see them noted and click select
to be received in and click post.
This post has now received goods from the in transit movement,
in Inventory Query to update the items on hand in warehouse E.
We are in Inventory Query,
looking at that item again,
and now you will see the in transit bucket is set to zero and
those goods have moved to the available on hand inventory.
In addition to manually capturing supply chain transfer orders,
MRP can also suggest those supply chain transfers,
if supply chain transfer details have been captured against the item.
If we look at the item associated with warehouse E,
we can see the transfer options enabled.
This is a transfer supplied item.
The source warehouse would be FG. You
can utilize warehouse buying rules,
so you can actually replenish this warehouse through
automation and MRP will use these details as part of its
calculation to suggest supply chain transfers for replenishment.
If you use warehouse buying rules,
you can establish warehouse buying rules for
this item related to warehouse E. So even if you
are stocking at order to max of less than min,
you can establish min-max rules against this warehouse.
MRP will see those rules and offer suggestions to
create supply chain transfers automatically for you.
As part of that MRP review,
you will actually see those details as far as
suggestions in Supply Chain Review Program.
Somewhere to purchase a review and job review.
Supply chain transfers can be manually captured
to move inventory between two warehouses,
providing the ability not only to order from
the supplying warehouse to the source warehouse,
but also to generate documentation that can be
used for picking and for shipping the goods to the requesting facility
MRP can utilize the transfer supply
rules set against the item warehouse.
It can also offer suggestions for supply chain transfer creation.