A manufacture order is the plan to build: it takes a finished product and its bill of materials, works out the components needed, and organises the batches that actually make it. It is the demand-and-planning layer of production, the bridge between “we need to make these” and the work that makes them.
- What the manufacture order plans
- How it explodes the bill of materials
- How it relates to batch orders
- Where it sits versus actual production
Anatomy of the screen
- Order – code, purpose, due date, location and the finished items to build.
- Parts – the flattened bill of materials: the components required, with ordered against pending so you can see what still needs sourcing.
- Batches – the batch orders created to do the making.
- Docs – links to those batch orders, to any purchase requisitions raised for shortfalls, and to the inventory entries behind the build.
How it behaves
Planning from the bill of materials
On confirmation the order flattens the bill of materials, walking every level to compute the components needed for the quantity you are building, and tracks ordered against pending. Where you are short, you raise purchase requisitions straight from the shortfall. It can be raised on its own, from a sales order (building to a customer's demand), or nested under a larger manufacture order.
Worked example
You raise a manufacture order for 50 gift sets. It flattens the bill to the components, 100 of A, 50 sub-assemblies, 200 of C, shows what is short, and you raise requisitions to procure them. Batch orders are then created to assemble the sets.
Edge cases and good practice
- Plan here, build in batches. The manufacture order organises; the batch order executes.
- Source shortfalls from the Parts view, raising requisitions for what is pending.
- Drive from a sales order when building to specific customer demand.
Related
- How to: Plan a manufacture order
- Reference: Batch Order (the execution)
- Reference: Bill of Materials