"Our inventory system works fine." That's what most shop owners say when asked about their spreadsheets, whiteboards, and mental notes. And technically, it's true. The system "works" in the sense that jobs get done and parts get ordered.
But "works" and "costs you money" aren't mutually exclusive. Manual inventory tracking has hidden costs that add up to thousands of dollars per year, money that goes straight out the door without most owners ever noticing.
The four hidden costs
Manual inventory tracking costs you money in four ways. Let's break down each one.
1. Time spent on manual counts and updates
How much time does someone in your shop spend on inventory each week? Walking around counting, updating spreadsheets, reconciling discrepancies, generating reports. For most small shops, it's 2-4 hours per week minimum.
Let's call it 2 hours per week. At a modest $50/hour labor cost:
- Weekly: $100
- Monthly: $433
- Yearly: $5,200
That's $5,200/year just to maintain a system that's probably still inaccurate.
2. Stockout delays
When you run out of a critical material and don't catch it in time, work stops. You're paying people to stand around while you scramble to find the part or pay rush shipping.
How often does this happen? Once a month? Twice? Let's say once a month, and each stockout costs you 4 hours of downtime across your team.
At $100/hour shop rate:
- Per incident: $400
- Yearly (12 incidents): $4,800
And that doesn't count the rush shipping costs, which can easily add another $1,000-2,000 per year.
3. Overstock and dead inventory
When you don't trust your inventory data, you order "just in case." That extra material sits on shelves, tying up cash that could be used elsewhere.
Most small shops have 10-20% more inventory than they need due to over-ordering. If you carry $50,000 in inventory, that's $5,000-10,000 in unnecessary stock.
The cost of carrying that inventory (storage space, opportunity cost of cash, obsolescence) is typically 20-25% per year:
- Excess inventory: $7,500 (15% of $50K)
- Carrying cost (20%): $1,500/year
4. Errors and corrections
Manual data entry means manual errors. Wrong quantities, duplicate entries, items in the wrong location. Each error takes time to find and fix.
A conservative estimate: 1 hour per week spent fixing inventory errors.
- Yearly: $2,600
Add it up
| Cost Category | Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Manual counting and updates | $5,200 |
| Stockout delays | $4,800 |
| Overstock carrying costs | $1,500 |
| Error correction | $2,600 |
| Total Annual Cost | $14,100 |
That's over $14,000 per year in hidden costs for a small shop with modest inventory. Larger operations easily see $25,000-50,000 in annual waste.
Why spreadsheets fail
Spreadsheets are where most shops start with inventory management. They're free, flexible, and everyone knows how to use them. But they have fundamental limitations:
No real-time updates
When someone uses material, they have to remember to update the spreadsheet. Later. If they remember. If they have access. If they don't make a typo.
Single user at a time
Two people updating the same spreadsheet? Someone's changes get overwritten. Cloud spreadsheets help, but still create conflicts and confusion.
No automated alerts
A spreadsheet won't tap you on the shoulder when you're running low. You have to remember to check, and check regularly.
Disconnected from everything else
Your spreadsheet doesn't talk to your quoting system, your purchasing, or your accounting. Every integration is manual.
Easy to break
One wrong formula, one deleted row, one corrupted file. Spreadsheets are fragile. Most shops have war stories about the time the inventory spreadsheet got destroyed.
What good inventory management looks like
Modern inventory systems eliminate the manual work while providing better visibility. Here's what to look for:
Updates at point of use
When you pull material, the system knows immediately. No walking back to a computer to update a spreadsheet.
Automatic reorder alerts
The system tracks quantities and tells you when to reorder. No more "just in case" ordering because you're not sure what you have.
Integration with quoting
When you build a quote, you can see what materials you have on hand. No more promising jobs and then scrambling for materials.
Real costs, real margins
Track what you paid for materials, not what you think you paid. Know your true margins on every job.
Access from anywhere
Check inventory from the shop floor, from a job site, from home. No more "I'll update it when I get back to my desk."
Stop losing money to manual tracking
AirShop gives you real-time inventory visibility, automatic reorder alerts, and direct integration with your quotes. No spreadsheets required.
SEE IT IN ACTIONMaking the switch
Moving from spreadsheets to a real inventory system sounds like a big project. It doesn't have to be. Here's the practical approach:
Start with your A items
You don't need to track everything perfectly on day one. Start with the 20% of items that matter most, the ones you use most often and that cause the most pain when you run out.
Import what you have
Your spreadsheet data isn't worthless. Import your item list, costs, and quantities as a starting point. Clean it up over time.
Set reorder points
For each item, decide: at what quantity do I need to reorder? Set alerts at those levels. Now the system does the watching for you.
Use it for everything
An inventory system only works if you use it. Make it the single source of truth. If it's not in the system, it doesn't exist.
The ROI is obvious
If manual inventory is costing you $14,000/year (conservatively), and a proper system costs $1,200/year, that's a 10x return. Even if you only eliminate half the waste, you're still way ahead.
More importantly, you get your time back. Instead of counting parts and updating spreadsheets, you can be quoting jobs, running machines, or going home at a reasonable hour.
The question isn't whether you can afford to switch to a real inventory system. It's whether you can afford not to.
Ready to calculate your specific costs? Try our ROI calculator or schedule a demo to see how AirShop can help.
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