solidoodlesupport wrote:DePartedPrinter wrote:elmoret wrote:Update: They refunded the shipping.
My new j-head from hotends.com was ordered on Friday and shipped the following Tuesday...I think SD needs to pick up the pace just a bit.
We're cranking them out as fast as we can 
you're missing the point.
earlier in this thread you promised that if it's listed as stocked then it's in stock ready to be shipped.
Either you lied or you don't know how to work the shop software. or things behind the scenes are just a huge mess
Then you order priority shipping at an increased cost for an item that you can't possibly ship with the deadline that the words "priority shipping" would engender because you don't even have the item, you'd need your supplier to have the item in stock first before you were able to order from them, then they'd need to reach you, then you need to repackage and post.
This isn't growing pains any more, you've been having these "growing pains" for nearly a year now and the exact same issue of right hand saying one thing whilst the left hand is busy proverbial slapping the customers in the face.
cranking them out as fast as you can is great.
but how hard would it be to have stock levels accurately listed in the shop?
it's not like I'm saying you need a billion dollar automated robotic system. but maybe just having someone accurately updating the stock levels for stock.
This is how you should quickly and easily ensure that there are no more issues like this.
you will need 1 cardboard box for each item that you sell in the shop, large enough to contain 10 of these items, (so the box containing rails will necessarily be bigger than the box containing thermistors!
additionally you will need a shelf to put these boxes on.
take ten of each item off the shop floor now and put them in a box an d up on a shelf.
then list the stock level as ten for each item.
as you re-stock your shop stock pile then you can update the values in the shop software.
it seems at the moment that you're working from one big bucket of parts that the internet shop and shop floor are sharing. it can't work like that because you don't know what your stock levels are.
run the internet shop "like" it was a separate business, let it have it's own stock piles and it's own stock level counters, treat the shop floor like it is a supplier to the internet shop business, and visa versa.
that way, nobody from the shop floor should be looking at the internet shops stock pile thinking I'll just borrow that hot end to complete my machine. and likewise, a run on products in the internet shop won't leave your factory staff on the shop floor without parts to build machines.
Now a single person can accurately keep stock levels and probably do all the wrapping/packing and shipping for the internet/spare parts shop
This isn't difficult.
it's common sense.
If you don't keep an accurate stock count of what is available for sale in the shop you're going to be destined to keep disappointing customers.
Where you have a customer who has received a broken machine and needs a new widget went out.
remember, you can take a part from the internet shop's stock boxes, but you must decrement the stock level in the online shop before you take this part out.
consider this.
10am you get an email saying an extruder broke in shipping.
10:05 you go and grab the last extruder in the internet shop stock pile
10:10 someone orders an extruder, with priority shipping
10:15 you go to decrement the stock list but can't because it's already at zero.
now you've got a customer that's unhappy because he received a broken machine, and a customer that's unhappy because you won't ship his parts for ages.
you'll have to deal with 2x unhappy customers, and 2x complaints, and again have to refund the priority shipping charges because you couldn't meet that promise.
Alternatively
consider this.
10am you get an email saying an extruder broke in shipping.
10:05 you go to decrement the stock list so that it reads zero.
10:10 you go and grab the last extruder in the internet shop stock pile
10:10 someone wants to order an extruder, with priority shipping, but they are told at the point of purchase that it's a back order.
Now you still have to deal with the guy who received a broken machine, but the other guy is happy because he at least knows where he stands, you haven't made promises that you'll end up breaking.
it's easy to say that it's not your fault that the promises get broken, it's just unlucky that the guy wanted to order before the stock counters were updated, it was only minutes or seconds. but that's bull.
if you don't keep accurate stock levels, if you don't make your stock levels reflect reality, then it's your fault.
(and after you promised the new extruder to the customer who got a broken one the stock level IS zero. it doesn't matter that the physical part is still in the stock pile, it's been promised to another person).
To be honest, the best thing that I can recommend you guys do is go look at how an ISO 9001 certified company operates.
I said earlier that this was common sense, maybe it's not common sense.
I'm not saying go and get certified, I'm saying take a leaf from the books of those companies.
have a written and documented procedure for how things work.
when things go wrong, it's normally because you are doing it wrong. you need to then go back and look at your procedures, where can they be improved etc.