- Business Central can block posting a purchase receipt until a heat or lot number is entered, making the trace impossible to skip.
- On assemblies, the system can block shipping or invoicing until the operator selects which heat lots were consumed and records what was produced.
- Enforced tracking produces a single connected trace from raw-material receipt through consumption to the customer, turning an auditor's question into a query.
- Routing jobs to machine centers with financial dimensions lets you report cost and margin per work center off the same setup.
Last month, a metal-fabrication and machining shop showed us how they track which steel went into which job: a spreadsheet kept on the side of the desk, separate from the ERP. With an ISO audit on the calendar, that wasn't going to hold.
This is a common spot for manufacturers and machine shops, and Business Central, Microsoft's cloud ERP, can turn that side-of-desk spreadsheet into an auditable chain the system enforces for you.
Traceability the system won't let you skip
The key idea is that you can configure lot and heat tracking so the system refuses to move forward without it:
- It can block posting a purchase receipt until a heat or lot number is entered.
- On an assembly, it can block shipping or invoicing until the operator selects which heat lots were actually consumed, and it records the heat number of what was produced.
The result is a single, connected trace: from the receipt of raw material, through what got consumed on a job, to what shipped, and to which customer. When an auditor asks where a given heat number went, that's a query, not an afternoon in a binder.
The difference between a spreadsheet and enforced tracking isn't the data, it's the discipline. A spreadsheet relies on someone remembering to fill it in. A required field at the moment of posting means the trace can't be skipped, which is exactly what a quality audit is checking for.
Cost and margin fall out of the same setup
While you're modeling the shop floor, you can route jobs to specific machine centers and use financial dimensions to report cost and margin per work center, with drill-down to the underlying entries. And if you build to order, an assembly-to-order setup means the system doesn't produce heat-tracked inventory until there's a sales order behind it, so you're not sitting on traceable material nobody bought.
If you're tracking traceability in a spreadsheet and an audit is coming, moving that into the system is usually less work than people fear, and it pays off every time someone asks where a part came from. We're glad to scope it with you. Let's talk it through.