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From release to completion — the work order, the dispatch list and the floor in real time.
Work-order release with material and capacity reservation, dispatch lists per work centre, mobile floor interfaces for operator confirmation, real-time production status, completion and consumption captured at the source — not re-keyed at end of shift.
Work-order release
Released only when material is allocated and capacity is reserved. No optimistic releases that wait on the floor for missing supply.
Dispatch lists
Per work centre, ordered by priority and changeover-friendly sequencing. The supervisor sees what to start next, not a backlog of pending work.
Mobile floor capture
Operators confirm start, completion and consumption on mobile terminals at the work centre. The system reflects the floor in real time.
Real-time status
Work-in-progress by work order, by work centre, by operator. Late-promise alerts, machine-down events and quality holds surfaced as they happen.
What the shop-floor surface covers
Work-order lifecycle
Planned → firm → released → in-progress → completed → closed, with appropriate controls at each transition (release gates, completion gates, close audits).
Dispatch lists
Per-work-centre lists ordered by configurable priority — earliest due, shortest setup, highest customer commitment, priority override.
Floor capture
Start, completion, scrap, quality hold, downtime — captured on mobile terminals with barcode scanning. Operator identification and timestamps preserved.
Machine integration
Where machines emit signals (PLC, OPC-UA, MQTT), counts and downtime events ingested automatically — no operator re-keying.
Real-time visibility
Work-in-progress dashboards by work centre, by order, by customer. Late-promise predictions surfaced to the supervisor before they become customer-visible problems.
Variance analysis
Standard vs actual on labour, material and overhead computed at order close. Variances routed to the controller with named cause categories.
Why floor capture in real time is a management decision, not a technology one
An ERP that allows the floor to be re-keyed at end of shift is making a management choice — accepting that production status is approximate, that variances are post-hoc and that the planning engine runs on yesterday's reality. The choice is rational if floor capture is operationally hard; it is not rational once mobile terminals and barcode scanners are routine.
Axional captures the floor as it happens. The planner sees what the operator just confirmed; the customer-service team sees what the planner is about to be late on; the supervisor sees the machine that went down two minutes ago. Real-time floor visibility is the foundation everything else builds on.