For decades, sawmills across New Zealand have tracked their timber inventory using a combination of clipboards, whiteboards, and spreadsheets. It works - until it doesn’t.
The problems are familiar to anyone who’s run a yard: stock counts that are out of date by the time you finish walking the rows, packs that get dispatched but never removed from the tally, and the constant question of “how much Radiata H3.2 do we actually have right now?”
The cost of inaccuracy
Inaccurate inventory doesn’t just cause confusion - it costs money. Over-ordering treatment chemicals, missing sales opportunities because you didn’t know stock was available, and spending hours on manual stocktakes all add up.
For a medium-sized mill processing 20,000 cubic metres per year, even a 2% inventory discrepancy can represent tens of thousands of dollars in misallocated resources.
What a digital system changes
Modern inventory systems built for sawmills - not adapted from retail or warehouse software - can track every pack from the moment it’s created at the saw to the moment it leaves on a truck. The key features to look for:
Barcode scanning on ruggedised devices that work outdoors, offline capability for yards with poor connectivity, real-time dashboard visibility, and integration with your existing dispatch and sales processes.
The shift is happening
Across New Zealand and Australia, progressive sawmills are adopting purpose-built inventory systems. The early adopters aren’t the largest operations - they’re the ones who got tired of counting the same packs twice.