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FireFlight SCM: Supply Chain Management Software for Operations That Cannot Afford Gaps
Agility.
Visibility.
Control.
FireFlight SCM: Supply Chain Management Software for Operations That Cannot Afford Gaps
Agility.
Visibility.
Control.
What does FireFlight SCM actually manage across the procurement cycle?
Procurement in FireFlight starts with supplier management. Every vendor, manufacturer, freight company, and service provider has a structured record in the Company Master workspace that captures contact history, transaction history, certifications, and compliance documentation. That record is the single source of truth for that supplier relationship across the entire operation. A buyer confirming a purchase order can see the full history of that supplier without searching a separate CRM or making a phone call.
Purchase requisitions move through a structured workflow before becoming purchase orders. Lead time management tracks the gap between when an order is placed and when goods are received, which is the data that makes demand planning useful. Without accurate lead time records, MRP calculations produce procurement schedules that look correct on paper but arrive late in practice. FireFlight maintains that lead time history at the supplier and item level, so planning is based on what actually happens rather than on assumptions.
Goods receipt management closes the loop between what was ordered and what arrived. Each receipt is matched against the corresponding purchase order and logged as a transaction in the inventory record. Discrepancies between ordered quantities and received quantities are flagged at receipt rather than discovered during a reconciliation cycle weeks later. Returns and RMA processing handles items that do not pass receipt inspection without creating a gap in the transaction record.
Procurement & Supplier Management
Company Master
Every procurement transaction in FireFlight is timestamped and attributed to the user who made it. Purchase orders, receipt confirmations, returns, and supplier communications each create an audit record that persists in the system. For operations subject to regulatory review or customer audit requirements, that procurement history is available on demand. The Supplier Risk and Compliance workspace tracks certifications, compliance documentation, and risk assessments at the supplier record level. A supplier whose certification has expired is flagged before a purchase order is placed rather than after a compliance finding. PCG has been building procurement systems for regulated manufacturing and industrial operations since 1995. The compliance architecture in FireFlight reflects what those audits actually ask for.
How does FireFlight SCM handle inventory visibility across warehouse sites?
Inventory in FireFlight SCM operates at the bin and location level across every warehouse site in the network. Real-time stock deduction means that when a work order consumes a part or a shipment leaves the warehouse, the inventory record updates at that moment. The count in the system reflects the count in the warehouse because the two are connected at the transaction level through barcode and scanning integration.
Receiving and putaway logic directs inbound goods to specific bin locations rather than leaving placement to individual warehouse staff judgment. When a shipment arrives, the system specifies where each item goes based on the configured storage rules for that item category. That structure is what makes physical inventory counts reliable. When every item is where the system says it is, cycle counts become verification exercises rather than discovery exercises.
Stock transfers between locations are logged as transactions. Multi-warehouse support means the same item appearing in three locations is visible in a single system query. A procurement manager confirming whether a reorder is necessary checks total network stock rather than calling each warehouse separately. That visibility is the difference between an operation that orders to actual need and one that orders to the last count it received from whoever answered the phone.
Inventory Control & Stock Management
Item & Material Master Data
How does FireFlight SCM handle planning and demand forecasting?
Demand planning in FireFlight calculates forward inventory requirements based on scheduled production, historical consumption rates, and configured lead times. The output is a prioritized view of what needs to be ordered, in what quantity, and by what date, based on actual operational data rather than manual estimates. Procurement teams working from that output are ordering to demand rather than reacting to shortages.
Material requirements planning runs the same calculation at the project and work order level. Given the bills of materials for scheduled work and the current inventory position across all warehouse sites, MRP identifies the gap between what is needed and what is available. That gap drives purchase requisitions rather than requiring a buyer to manually cross-reference job requirements against warehouse stock across separate systems.
The Cutlist Manager handles material optimization for operations that cut from stock. Rather than ordering to nominal requirements and accumulating cut waste over time, the cutlist calculation finds the minimum material quantity that satisfies the job requirements based on available stock dimensions. For operations processing sheet goods, structural materials, or similar stock, that optimization directly reduces material cost per job.
Planning & Optimization
What other workspaces does FireFlight SCM connect to inside the platform?
SCM in FireFlight is the supply-side layer that feeds and receives from every operational area. The workspaces below are active in the SCM configuration, each handling a specific function that connects directly to procurement, inventory, or supplier management.
| Workspace | What It Handles in SCM Context | Without the Connection |
|---|---|---|
| Financial and Billing | Purchase order costs, accounts payable transactions, and supplier invoices post directly to financial records. Landed cost is tracked against each receipt. | Finance reconciles procurement costs manually against warehouse receipts at month end. Variances between what was ordered, received, and invoiced are discovered late. |
| Work Orders | Open work orders drive material requirements. Parts consumed on work orders deduct from inventory in real time and trigger reorder logic when thresholds are crossed. | Parts consumption is tracked separately from the work order record. Inventory counts drift from actual usage and reorder decisions lag behind real consumption. |
| EAM and Asset Management | Spare parts inventory connects to asset maintenance schedules. Certifications and maintenance schedules for supplier assets are tracked in the same system as procurement records. | Maintenance parts are managed outside the asset record. Required parts for scheduled maintenance are not reserved in advance and jobs are delayed when stock is unavailable. |
| Site and Location Management | Supplier delivery addresses, receiving sites, and regional warehouse divisions are mapped inside the same system as procurement and inventory records. | Delivery routing decisions are made from information held outside the system. Shipments arrive at the wrong site or require manual redirection after the order is placed. |
| IT Asset and Subscription Management | Software licenses, network device inventory, and IT asset warranties are tracked alongside physical procurement records. | IT procurement is managed separately from operational procurement. License renewals and hardware replacements are missed because they sit outside the main procurement workflow. |
| Messaging and Communication | Bulk supplier communications, email templates, and outgoing message logs are connected to supplier records. Every outbound message to a vendor is logged against their record. | Supplier communications are managed outside the system. Confirming whether a supplier received a purchase order requires searching email rather than checking the supplier record. |
The most consistent supply chain failure PCG sees is not a procurement problem or an inventory problem in isolation. It is the gap between the two. Procurement places orders based on what inventory says is needed. Inventory records are only as accurate as the last physical count, which may be weeks old. FireFlight closes that gap by connecting procurement decisions to real-time inventory data rather than to periodic snapshots. The second pattern that appears repeatedly: supplier relationship management that lives in email and spreadsheets outside the procurement system. When a dispute arises about a delivery, whether it arrived, whether it matched the order, what condition it was in, the answer should be in the system. In FireFlight it is. Goods receipt management, return records, and supplier communication logs are all attached to the supplier record and the relevant purchase order. The dispute resolution that previously took days takes minutes.
What changes once the supply chain is connected from requisition to receipt?
The operational improvements are specific. They appear in the first quarter of operation, not after an extended adjustment period.
Stockouts decrease because demand planning and MRP identify shortages before they affect production rather than after a work order has already been stopped.
Procurement cost reporting is current because purchase order costs post to financial records at receipt rather than requiring a separate data entry process.
Goods receipt discrepancies are caught at delivery rather than during month-end reconciliation, which means the resolution happens when the supplier can still correct it.
Supplier compliance documentation is current because certifications are tracked at the supplier record level with expiration alerts rather than maintained in a separate document folder.
Inventory accuracy improves because receiving and putaway logic directs goods to specific bins and barcode scanning updates records at the moment of physical movement.
Procurement lead times shorten because purchase requisitions are triggered automatically at reorder thresholds rather than waiting for someone to notice a shortage.
Supply chain visibility is available to every team that needs it because procurement, inventory, and supplier data are in one system rather than distributed across separate tools
Operations that have been managing supply chains across procurement tools, inventory spreadsheets, and supplier email threads carry a coordination cost on every order cycle. FireFlight SCM does not add process to supply chain management. It removes the overhead of maintaining separate records across separate systems and keeps the people involved in procurement, receiving, and planning working from the same data. Most deployments are operational in weeks, not months.
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What is the difference between FireFlight SCM and a basic procurement tool?
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How does FireFlight SCM prevent stockouts and overstock situations?
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Can FireFlight SCM manage supplier compliance and certifications?
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How does FireFlight handle goods receipt and discrepancy management?
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Does FireFlight SCM connect to financial reporting and accounts payable?
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Can FireFlight SCM manage IT assets and software subscriptions alongside physical procurement?
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How long does a FireFlight SCM deployment take?
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PCG founded 1995. 500+ applications built across 31 years, roughly one-third in regulated environments where software failure carries direct operational and compliance consequences. FireFlight is the platform built from that body of work.
phxconsultants.com LinkedInFireFlight Data Systems is a product of Phoenix Consultants Group. PCG founded 1995. All system configurations are custom-built for each deployment. Implementation timelines, module availability, and integration scope vary by organization. Contact PCG directly to discuss requirements specific to your operation.