Allocation clarity
Tier-aware maps for POSM families — fewer mystery boxes at the dock.
POSM inventory planning blueprint
Short articles from the Energyx desk — routing, audits, and bilingual headers without fluff.
How we sequence totes when backroom depth is shallow and night staff is thin—practical notes from Hat Yai corridor pilots.
Checklists fail when they read like homework. Here is a lighter rubric we use for clip strips and danglers.
Programs stay operational: we translate outlet realities into documents distributors can follow without a slide deck of promises.
Tier-aware maps for POSM families — fewer mystery boxes at the dock.
Sequences that respect removal space, not just print deadlines.
Shared columns for on-hand, in-transit, and exceptions everyone names the same way.
“Metro Multi-Hub Reconciliation Sync gave us shared discrepancy codes — fewer angry phone chains between Bang Na hubs.”
Counter Card Pulse Program is fast — sometimes too fast for legal stickers — but the pulse calendar still rides in our van clipboard.
Clip strips: tamed.
“We still disagree on creative risk, yet Campaign Wave Handoff Lab stopped manifest churn after week two.”
Three active tracks — pricing stays on the detail page to keep this row calm.
Depot-to-aisle allocation map for one campaign wave with outlet grouping rules.
Measured refresh planning for cooler skins with stock-on-hand visibility.
30-day pulses for counter cards with pharmacy-friendly pack sizes.
Drop your working spreadsheet, distributor quirks, and the POSM families you fear will collide. We reply with how a planning program would slot in — no payment links on this site.
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