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Operational Status Dashboard: Know What Is Depleted, Low, and Critical Right Now
Zero Order Quantity Depleted Stocks, Inventory Balance Restock Status, and Critical Parts Below Threshold from live inventory data: so operational gaps are visible before they stop work, not after.
A critical part that drops below its minimum threshold on a Tuesday afternoon needs to be visible to the procurement team on Tuesday afternoon. Not at the end of the week when someone runs a low-stock report. Not on Friday when the weekend makes expediting impossible. The Critical Parts Below Threshold alert fires when the threshold is crossed and stays visible until the situation is resolved.
Schedule your free consultationWhat is the difference between depleted stock, low stock, and critical stock?
Each of the three indicators addresses a different severity level of the same underlying problem. Zero Order Quantity Depleted Stocks is the most urgent: the item is at zero on-hand balance and there is no open replenishment order. The stock is gone and nothing is coming. For any operational item, that is an uncontrolled exposure. For a compliance part or a safety supply, it is a potential regulatory or safety condition.
Inventory Balance Restock Status addresses the level below depleted: items that have not reached zero yet but are approaching their reorder point. For items with configured reorder points, the dashboard shows which have triggered replenishment and which are approaching the trigger without a procurement action in motion. The distinction between approaching-reorder-with-PO-in-progress and approaching-reorder-with-nothing-ordered is the difference between a managed situation and an unmanaged one.
Critical Parts Below Threshold is a separate indicator because not all inventory is equally consequential when it runs low. Most items can tolerate a brief stockout without immediately disrupting operations. A small subset of items cannot. Their absence stops work, creates a safety exposure, or triggers a regulatory non-compliance condition. PCG configures which items qualify as critical during deployment based on the specific operational requirements of each facility. When one of those items crosses its minimum threshold, the alert fires separately from the general low-stock view so it is not lost in a longer inventory status list.
The Restock Status indicator shows both the current balance position and the replenishment status for each item approaching its reorder point. An item at 20% of its par level with an open PO expected next week is a different situation from the same item at 20% with no replenishment in the system. Both are visible, and the distinction is what determines whether the action required is monitoring or procurement.
For multi-site operations, the dashboard filters by location so site managers see the stock status specific to their facility rather than an undifferentiated view of all inventory across all sites. A depleted part at one location may have adequate stock at another, which changes the response options available.
Why critical parts classification matters in regulated and compliance-driven operations
Environmental consulting firms and industrial EHS operators carry inventory whose absence has consequences beyond the operational inconvenience of a stockout. A personal protective equipment item required for a remediation site mobilization. A testing supply needed for a scheduled regulatory inspection. A replacement part for a safety-critical system with no acceptable substitute available on short notice. None of these are items that can be managed with the same lead time tolerance as a general supply item.
PCG has been building inventory and compliance management software for regulated industries since 1995. The firms that avoid compliance and safety inventory gaps consistently are the ones that have identified their critical items specifically and configured their stock monitoring to treat those items differently from general inventory. A generic low-stock report that lists critical and non-critical items together in a single view by quantity produces the same urgency for everything and therefore produces appropriate urgency for nothing. The Critical Parts Below Threshold indicator addresses this by configuration rather than by requiring someone to mentally sort a mixed list every time they review stock status.
How does this dashboard connect to the procurement and replenishment workflow?
The Operational Status Dashboard sits at the front end of the replenishment trigger. When a depleted stock appears in the Zero Order Quantity view with no open PO, that is the signal for procurement to act. When an item appears in the Restock Status view approaching its reorder point without a replenishment in motion, that is the signal for procurement to initiate one before the item reaches zero. When a critical part crosses below threshold, that is the signal for expedited action rather than routine replenishment.
The dashboard does not make those decisions automatically. It surfaces the information that makes those decisions possible at the right time. An operations manager who sees a critical part threshold alert first thing in the morning can initiate an expedited order or arrange a cross-site transfer before the day's scheduled work requires that part. The same situation discovered when a crew is already staged for deployment is a different problem with a narrower set of responses.
Your Personal Guide on Every Page
From the first click to the final step, Ikhana, your on-screen tutor, shows you how it all works. Every field, every button, every page explained with clarity, right where you need it.
In the Operational Status Dashboard, Ikhana guides operations managers, site leads, and procurement staff through reading the depleted stock list, interpreting restock status for approaching-threshold items, and understanding what a critical parts alert requires in terms of response priority and timeline.
Learn more about IkhanaDashboard Highlights
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Zero Order Quantity Depleted Stocks - Items at zero on-hand balance with no open replenishment order in the system, identified from live inventory data. The most urgent stock status category: the item is gone and nothing is ordered to replace it. Updates automatically when stock is received or a PO is placed.
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Inventory Balance Restock Status - Items approaching their reorder point with their current replenishment status shown alongside the balance position. Distinguishes between items with a PO in progress and items approaching the threshold with no procurement action initiated, so operations and procurement teams can see which situations are managed and which require immediate attention.
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Critical Parts Below Threshold - A dedicated alert for the subset of items whose stockout would cause an immediate operational, safety, or compliance disruption. Configured during deployment to match your specific critical item list. Fires separately from the general low-stock view so critical situations are not mixed with routine restock items in the same review list.
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Live data from connected inventory systems - All three indicators update automatically as picks are recorded, as stock is received, and as inventory adjustments post. A critical part that drops below threshold appears in the alert immediately. A depleted item that receives a replenishment order moves out of the Zero Order Quantity view the moment the PO is placed.
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Site and category segmentation - Dashboard filters configured during deployment to match your inventory and facility structure. Multi-site operations see stock status by location. Operations managing compliance supplies, safety equipment, and field materials in separate categories can filter by category to understand where operational risk is concentrated by type of inventory.
What PCG has learned across 31 years of inventory and operations management software implementations
The most consistent finding across three decades of building inventory systems for regulated operations: the operational disruptions that trace back to stockouts almost always have a visible precursor. The item was approaching zero for days before it reached zero. The threshold was crossed on a Tuesday and discovered on a Thursday when the crew arrived at the site. The depleted position had no open PO because the replenishment trigger was not being watched continuously. The Operational Status Dashboard addresses all three of those gaps by presenting the stock status picture in real time rather than at a scheduled review interval.
Critical parts classification is the configuration step that PCG invests the most time in during deployment because it is the step that determines how useful the dashboard actually is. An undifferentiated list of all low-stock items produces the same visual urgency for everything, which means it effectively communicates urgency for nothing. The firms whose operations teams respond fastest and most appropriately to stock alerts are the ones whose critical item list is specific, current, and reflected in a dedicated dashboard indicator rather than buried in a general inventory status report.
What changes when depleted and critical stock is visible the day it happens?
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Zero-balance items with no replenishment order are identified the day they reach zero rather than when someone tries to pull the item and finds nothing there, which changes the response from reactive sourcing to proactive procurement.
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Critical parts threshold alerts reach the operations and procurement team on the day the threshold is crossed, when expedited replenishment or cross-site transfer is still a planning option rather than an emergency response.
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Items approaching reorder with no procurement action in motion are visible in the Restock Status view before they reach zero, giving procurement time to initiate a standard replenishment rather than an expedited one.
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Compliance and safety inventory gaps are identified before a scheduled site activity depends on the missing item, which changes the situation from a regulatory or safety exposure to a managed procurement gap with time to resolve.
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Operations managers at multi-site facilities see the stock status specific to their location rather than an undifferentiated view of all inventory across all sites, so site-level decisions are made with site-relevant information.
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Procurement staff spend less time manually checking stock levels before each replenishment cycle and more time responding to the specific depleted, low, and critical alerts the dashboard surfaces automatically from live inventory data.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Operational Status Dashboard track?
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What is Zero Order Quantity Depleted Stocks?
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What does Inventory Balance Restock Status show?
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What are Critical Parts Below Threshold and why do they get a separate indicator?
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Does the dashboard update automatically as inventory transactions are recorded?
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Can the dashboard filter by location, category, or project?
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How long does it take to get this dashboard configured and live?
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If your operations team is discovering depleted compliance parts and critical stock gaps when someone tries to pull an item rather than the morning before it matters, the monitoring system is arriving too late to change the outcome. FireFlight's Operational Status Dashboard surfaces those gaps the day they develop. PCG deploys in weeks, not months.
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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.