A dairy processor tracked batches on paper, so a recall meant days of digging and near-date stock went to waste. ERPNext joined intake, traceability, quality and dispatch into one system.
Milk intake was logged on gate slips, batch records were kept on paper, and expiry was tracked by hand. When a supplier lot was questioned, staff spent days matching it to finished product, and near-date stock was often found too late and written off.
We set up ERPNext so each milk intake is a batch at the gate, carried through processing with quality checks, and tracked to finished goods with expiry. Dispatch picks the right batch in the right order.
We built the batch and quality structure around the plant's food safety standard, kept gate capture quick for a busy intake, and ran a practice recall trace to prove it end to end before go-live.
Go-live took twelve weeks, timed ahead of the peak season.
A trace that took days now runs in minutes, and every bottle links back to its intake. Wastage fell by 30 percent because near-date stock is used first, and the last audit closed with no findings on traceability.
We tracked batches on paper and a recall meant days of digging. Now every bottle traces back to the intake in minutes, and near-date stock stopped going to waste.
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