Last updated: May 2026

Bin & Location Management: every item placed, every location known

Warehouse teams lose time when location data lives in someone's head or a spreadsheet that is always one update behind. This app gives you a full hierarchy from site down to bin, assigns quantities to exact storage slots, and keeps that structure live across picking, receiving, plus transfers.

Can FireFlight manage multi-level storage hierarchies down to individual bin and shelf locations?
Yes. Bin & Location Management supports a five-tier structure from site to bin, assigns and tracks inventory quantities at each level, flags capacity limits, plus connects directly to picking, receiving, plus transfer workflows. Teams running multiple warehouses or distribution points are operational in weeks, not months.
Bin and Location Management workspace in FireFlight showing warehouse hierarchy, bin assignments, and inventory quantities by location

In 2026, operations teams running multiple storage zones without location-level data are losing time on every pick cycle. See how bin-level control looks on a live dataset built for your type of operation.

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Why does inventory accuracy break down at the location level?

Most inventory systems track what you have. Far fewer track where it is at the level that actually matters during a pick or a putaway. A system that knows you have 200 units of a fastener does not help a warehouse worker who needs to find them across three buildings and six zones before a production line stops waiting. The gap between "we have it" and "we know exactly where it is" is where accuracy breaks down and pick errors multiply.

The problem compounds in operations that grew organically. A single storeroom becomes two warehouses. Zones get added informally. Someone starts maintaining a personal spreadsheet of which bin holds which item because the main system does not go that deep. That spreadsheet becomes the actual system, until the person who maintains it is out sick or leaves. Then the location knowledge walks out the door with them.

Bin-level location management is not a luxury for large distribution centers. Any operation with more than one storage zone, more than one person doing putaway, or any expectation of audit-readiness needs location data that lives in the system rather than in someone's memory or a personal file.

How does the app give your team precise control over every storage slot?

The location hierarchy in FireFlight runs five levels deep: Site, Location, Building, then Zone down to Bin. You build the structure to match your physical layout exactly. A single storeroom might use three levels. A multi-site distribution operation might use all five. The system does not force a structure on you. You define what your operation actually looks like, then assign inventory quantities to the nodes where items actually live.

Bin rules give operations managers the controls that matter at scale. You can set capacity limits per bin so putaway workflows flag overflow before it happens. You can lock or freeze individual bins during cycle counts or reorganization without affecting the rest of the warehouse. Barcode-ready location ID fields mean the same records that display on screen map directly to whatever scanning hardware your team already uses.

The connection to picking, receiving, plus transfers is live, not batch. When a goods receipt closes against a bin, that bin's quantity updates immediately. When a transfer moves items between zones, both locations reflect the change before the next pick cycle starts. The inventory count your team sees is the inventory count that is actually there, not a snapshot from last night's sync.

What apps does Bin & Location Management connect to?

Location data is only useful when it is connected to what is moving. These modules read from and write to the same location records your warehouse team maintains.

Barcode Scanners ERP Integrations Cycle Count Workflows

Your location data stays on your infrastructure

FireFlight is hosted by Phoenix Consultants Group on infrastructure PCG owns and controls directly. Your warehouse hierarchy, bin assignments, and inventory counts are not on a shared SaaS platform where another company's outage takes your operations offline. PCG has managed its own hosting environment since 1995.

Role-based access controls what each user can see and modify. A warehouse worker doing putaway sees their bins. A manager doing a cycle count sees the full zone. An auditor gets read-only access to the location records they need without touching anything else. Every action on a bin record carries a user stamp and a timestamp.

What does Bin & Location Management give your team?

  • Five-tier location hierarchy from site down to individual bin. Build the structure to match your physical layout. Single storeroom or multi-site distribution, the same system handles both.
  • Inventory quantities assigned and tracked at the bin level. Know not just what you have but exactly where it is sitting before the pick cycle starts.
  • Bin capacity rules that flag overflow before putaway happens. Set limits per location. The system warns when a bin is approaching capacity rather than letting an overfill create a floor problem.
  • Bin lock and freeze controls for audits or reorganization. Take a bin or zone out of active use without disrupting the rest of the warehouse. Restore it when the count or move is complete.
  • Barcode-ready location ID fields for scanning compatibility. The same location records that display on screen map directly to your existing scanning hardware without a separate configuration layer.
  • Live updates from receiving, transfers, plus picking workflows. Bin quantities reflect actual movements as they happen. No overnight sync. No stale count from a batch run that finished hours ago.
  • Support for serialized, batch, plus standard inventory types. One location structure handles all three without separate modules or separate location records per inventory classification.
  • Visual mapping for warehouse layout and slotting decisions. The floor plan lives as data, not a separate drawing that goes stale the moment something moves. Update a bin assignment and the layout reflects it immediately.
"We reduced picking errors by 85% once we mapped everything down to the bin. The system knows where everything is. So does our team."
Inventory ManagerMulti-Site Supplier

Your warehouse data should answer questions, not just store them

In 2026, the operations managers who move fastest are the ones who can query their own live data without waiting for a report. FireFlight's AI reporting layer lets warehouse managers ask specific questions about their location data and get direct answers from the actual records, not a canned summary built last week. Which bins have been frozen longest. Which zones are running above 90% capacity. Where a specific serialized item was last confirmed. The question goes in. The answer comes from your data.

Phoenix Consultants Group has been building custom operations software since 1995. The AI layer is not a bolt-on from a third-party vendor. PCG built it into FireFlight because the clients who needed custom software in 1995 still need the same thing today: a system that answers their specific operational questions rather than making them fit their questions to a canned report structure. Over 500 applications built. The same team answers the phone when something needs adjusting.

What changes operationally after deploying this app?

  • Pick cycles run faster because workers know the exact bin before they start moving, not after they have checked three possible locations.
  • Cycle counts become auditable because every bin has a defined record. The count is a comparison against data, not a starting-from-zero recount of every shelf.
  • Warehouse reorganizations stop being a documentation crisis. Move the physical items, update the bin records, and the system reflects the new layout the same day.
  • New staff reach full productivity faster because location knowledge is in the system rather than transferred informally from whoever trained them.
  • Receiving discrepancies link directly to the bin where an item was placed, so tracing a putaway error takes a search rather than a conversation with whoever was on the dock that day.
Ikhana interactive tutorial guide
On-Screen Guide

New warehouse staff productive from day one

Ikhana walks every user through bin assignments, location lookups, and transfer workflows directly on the screen they are using. No separate training session required before someone can do a putaway or run a location search. The guidance is embedded in the workflow, not in a manual that lives in a drawer somewhere.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How deep can the location hierarchy go, and can we configure it for our specific warehouse layout?
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The hierarchy runs five levels: Site, Location, Building, Zone, plus Bin. You configure which levels apply to your operation. A single storeroom might only use three. A multi-site distribution setup might use all five with different naming conventions at each site. PCG configures the structure to match your physical layout during deployment, and you can adjust it as your operation changes. The goal is for the system to describe your warehouse, not the other way around.
Can we lock bins during a cycle count without stopping the rest of the warehouse?
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Yes. Individual bins or entire zones can be frozen for audit or reorganization without affecting any other part of the warehouse. The freeze flag prevents putaway or pick transactions against that location while the count is in progress. When the count is complete, the bin unlocks and returns to active status. The rest of the warehouse keeps running normally throughout.
Does this work with the barcode scanners we already have in the warehouse?
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Yes. Location IDs in FireFlight are barcode-ready fields that map directly to whatever scanning hardware your team uses. PCG configures the barcode format to match your existing label scheme. You do not need to relabel your warehouse or replace your scanners. The system adapts to your current physical setup rather than requiring you to rebuild it around new hardware.
How does the app handle items that can be stored in more than one bin at a time?
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The same item can have quantity assigned across multiple bins simultaneously. The system tracks the quantity at each bin location independently and shows the total available across all locations. When a pick order comes in, the warehouse team can see which bins hold the item and how much is in each before deciding where to pull from. For serialized inventory, each unit's specific bin location is tracked individually.
How long does it take to map our existing warehouse into the system and go live?
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For most operations, the location hierarchy is built and initial bin assignments are loaded within the first two weeks of deployment. The full go-live, including staff training with Ikhana and integration testing with receiving and inventory control, typically lands in weeks, not months. PCG has deployed this module inside operations ranging from a single storeroom to multi-building distribution centers. The timeline depends on your layout complexity, not the size of your organization.
Can we set capacity limits per bin and get alerts when a bin is getting full?
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Yes. Capacity rules can be set per bin with a maximum unit count or weight limit depending on how your operation measures capacity. When a putaway transaction would push a bin above its defined limit, the system flags it before the transaction completes. That flag gives the warehouse worker the option to choose an alternate bin rather than discovering an overflow problem during the next cycle count.
Does Bin & Location Management work for operations that handle serialized or batch-tracked inventory?
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Yes. The same location structure handles serialized, batch-tracked, plus standard inventory without separate records or separate modules per type. For serialized items, each unit's bin location is tracked individually. For batch inventory, the batch number travels with the location assignment. Standard inventory tracks quantity per bin. All three types can coexist in the same warehouse hierarchy without any configuration conflict.
Allison Woolbert, Principal of Phoenix Consultants Group
Allison Woolbert
Principal, Phoenix Consultants Group

Allison has been building custom operations software since before PCG was founded in 1995. Over 31 years and 500+ applications, she has worked with small businesses, Fortune 500 companies, nonprofits, plus government contractors. FireFlight is the platform built from that work: modular, AI-integrated, hosted plus supported directly by PCG. Every call answered.

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Phoenix Consultants Group. Founded 1995. FireFlight Data Systems is a proprietary platform developed and hosted by PCG. Page last reviewed May 2026.

Your Inventory Deserves Better Than Guesswork

Cut picking time, reduce misplaced stock, and give your team a layout they can trust, from the top shelf to the bottom bin.