Wix ecommerce (web shop) integration
Breww now integrates with Wix for online sales and stock level syncing! Find out more in our Sales platform integrations guide.
Breww now integrates with Wix for online sales and stock level syncing! Find out more in our Sales platform integrations guide.
The theoretical max stock level can be complex to calculate, and determining the "limiting factor" can sometimes involve checking quite a few components. To help make this easier, we now have a brand new tool dedicated to this. Simply use the "sidebar" button next to the stock level to see a breakdown of how the theoretical max stock level was calculated. Please see Investigating why the stock level shows as it does for more on this new tool.
Recently, we introduced a step in the racking process to allow you to set the best before date instead of using the date from your rules. This step is useful and important to many people, but for the majority of people who want to use the Breww calculated date, it's another step to have to click through. This step has been removed, and the option has been bundled into the final confirmation step. You still have the same flexibility, but we hope this is a better overall user experience.
It's now possible to create a credit note directly from the original invoice. This saves time entering the products as you can simply confirm the quantity of each item on the invoice that requires crediting (with decimal quantities for a part-credit). This will also automatically use the value paid for the item on the invoice, rather than "today's price". For more information, please see the original feature request and the updated help guide.
This provides greater flexibility in helping you use the right numbers for your business. You can also now keep integrations on a separate number sequence from sales raised manually in Breww. For more on how this works, please see the Define invoice and credit note numbering sequence help guide.
You can duplicate any order by using the Order actions -> Duplicate order button shown at the top-right of the page when viewing any order.
If your business needs to have purchase orders approved before they can be finalised, you can now configure this in Breww. Find out more at Configuring Purchase Order (PO) authorisation/approval/sign-off requirements.
Currently, non-returnable stock label barcodes represent the unique non-returnable code generated for that individual container or packaging. However, you can now configure this barcode to represent the stock's product and batch, which, when scanned, will assign any available non-returnable stock for that product and batch.
If you would like to use this new option, simply go to Settings -> Label & printing settings -> Scroll down to Non-returnable & smallpack stock labels -> Set the Barcode option content to Use the product and batch combination barcode on stock labels.
If you have non-returnable stock that is already labelled with the previous barcode type, you can also enable the new Treat unique non-returnable barcodes as a product and batch combination barcode if the non-returnable stock isn't available setting to turn these barcodes into product and batch combination barcodes.
To take advantage of this new feature, you will need to update the Breww mobile app to the latest version.
Thanks again to our terrific community for this feature request.
You can now group stock into pallets, which can then be delivered and moved as one item, helping to streamline your stock management! After assembling the stock onto a pallet, you can print the pallet's label and use it to scan it onto deliveries and site transfers exactly like existing stock and container labels.
To learn more about taking advantage of the new pallet functionality, please see our Pallet management in Breww help guide.
The type of beer previously known as "Derived" is now, more descriptively, named "Derived at packaging" as there is a brand new type of beer called "Derived in vessel". "Derived at packaging" beers work just as "Derived" has previously worked, but the new "Derived in vessel" allows you to plan batches of the derived beer, including planning which vessels will be used on the batch schedule, adding their own recipes and adding extra ingredients to the batch while it's in vessel (as opposed to at the point of packaging). Find out more about the differences and how to use "Derived in vessel" beers in our Alias, derived & guest beers help guide.