The River Company
The geography of the business
Shops: Small storefronts and fulfillment micro-hubs across towns — the places customers see and where local inventory lives.
Districts: Groups of shops clustered by city or metro area (five to twelve shops per district). Each district shared a logistics coordinator and a district manager.
Regions: Collections of districts — Northeast, Midwest, South, West — where regional directors set strategy and capital priorities.
Headquarters:The nerve center for finance, forecasting, product, and the manufacturing teams.
The problem
Where inventory actually was (shop shelf, district transfer queue, regional warehouse, or in transit).
How money flowed— P&L at the shop level that could roll up through district and region into the corporate statement.
Which manufacturing teams were truly the best— not by anecdotes, but by measurable, comparable metrics.
The characters who fixed it
Maya, the inventory manager, who loved maps and hated surprises.
Sam, the logistics lead, who had a habit of solving problems on a whiteboard at 2 a.m.
Jules, the district manager who could smell inefficiency from three blocks away.
Renee, the CFO, whose favorite phrase was “roll up the numbers.”
Diego, manufacturing foreman, who believed the best ideas came from the shop floor.
The solution
Identify nearby shops with excess inventory and automatically generate a low-cost transfer order.
Suggest regional consolidationswhere small transfers were batched into a single truck movement.
Use priority shipping only when ther were true lost sales at risk.
Throughput: units completed per shift
Yield: percent of finished product that met quality standards
Changeover time: minutes to switch product lines
On-time fulfillment: percent of production shipped by promised date
Cost per unit: raw materials + labor + over head allocated
A decisive week
The system flagged the spike and alerted the district coordinator.
It recommended transfers from a suburban shop two miles away with surplus inventory, and scheduled a same-day courier that cost a fraction of and overnight express fee.
The district P&L reflected the transfer cost, the surge in sales, and the improved local margin — which rolled up to the regional report.
HQ saw a pattern forming across multiple metro areas and ordered a small, targeted production run at the most efficient manufacturing plant. Because the plant had lower scrap and faster changeover, the unit cost was lower than the historic average.
The deeper change
The moral (but practical)
Visibility reduces panic — when you know where things are, you make cheaper choices.
Local autonomy with disciplined roll-ups scales — shops can act fast, districts can optimize, and finance still gets consolidated, accurate numbers.
Measure manufacturing, and then trust the measures — objective production metrics allowed HQ to direct work where it made economic sense and to copy good process across plants.
Epilogue
The River Company: Why They Needed FireFlight
Real-time visibility into inventory across all levels (shop, district, region, warehouse)
Financial transparency with accurate roll-ups from shop to HQ
Metrics to understand and optimize manufacturing performance
Tools to reduce shipping costs and improve stock allocation
FireFlight Implementation for River Company
Single Source of Truth:Unified inventory, orders, transfers, shop P&L, and manufacturing data.
Real-Time Event Pipeline:Captures POS sales, transfers, and production events.
Calculation Engine:Consistent business logic for financials, cost allocation, and roll-ups.
Scenario Engine: “What-if” simulations for transfers, production allocation, and financial outcomes.
Transfer Optimizer:Minimizes shipping and inventory costs.
Role & Workflow Controls: District-level approvals with HQ oversight.
Reporting & Dashboards: Drill-down from shop → district → region → national P&L.
Build/Deploy & Migration Pipelines:Safe rule changes and legacy data integration. who- I
Problem | FireFlight Solution |
Shop stockouts, excess inventory | Unified inventory + transfer optimizer. Transfers suggested and auto- executed, reducing stockouts. |
Rising freight costs | Scenario engine evaluates transfer vs. expedited shipping vs. lost sales, reducing unnecessary freight. |
Fragmented finance roll-ups | Central calculation engine rolls up shop P&L to district, region, and HQ with auditability. |
Manufacturing inefficiency | Event-based KPIs (throughput, yield, cost/unit) allow HQ to reallocate production and improve processes company-wide. |
Event Flow Example
Customer buys at Shop A → sale event to FireFlight
Inventory updated across district
Safety stock check triggers transfer optimizer if stockout risk > threshold
District manager approves suggested transfer (Shop B surplus)
Transfer cost recorded; inventory marked in transit
Scenario engine simulates regional production adjustments at most efficient plant
Finance dashboards automatically reflect local and regional financial impact
Data & Technical Highlights
Canonical entities: SKU, Lot/Batch, Location, TransferOrder,Sale, ProductionRun, FreightInvoice, JournalEntry
Event bus: append-only transactional event stream
Materialized views: fast roll-ups for P&L and inventory metrics
Calculation layer: versioned business rules
APIs/connectors: POS, WMS, ERP, TMS, MES integrations
Security: role-based access, row-level controls, full audit log
KPIs Monitored
Shop: days-of-supply, stockouts, gross margin
District: transfer cost/unit, fill rate, inventory carrying cost
Region: aggregated margin, manufacturing allocation efficiency, capital tied to inventory
Manufacturing: units/shift, yield %, scrap cost, changeover minutes, cost/unit
Implementation Phases
Phase 1 (30–60 days): FireFlight environments, POS/WMS integration for pilot shops,
shop-level P&L calculation
Phase 2 (2–3 months): Transfer optimizer, district dashboards, workflow approvals,
historical data migration
Phase 3: MES integration, manufacturing scenario engine, CI/CD for business rules,
full roll-up and audit configuration
Outcome
With FireFlight, River Company achieves:
Optimized inventory movement
Reduced freight and lost sales
Accurate and auditable financial roll-ups
Data-driven manufacturing improvements
Visibility and actionable insights at shop, district, region, and HQ levels