Make

Build recipes with ingredients and yields, schedule work orders, track production batches, and manage manufacturing workflows.

Work Orders Management
Work orders track your manufacturing and assembly tasks from planning through completion. Each step below has a Show me button that lights up the compass on the matching control so you can see exactly where it lives.
Creating Templates
Templates let you define recipes, formulas, BOMs, and assemblies. Each step below has a Show me button that lights up the compass on the matching control so you can see exactly where it lives.
Making Overview
The Make section is for businesses that produce, assemble, or prepare products — whether that's cooking recipes, assembling kits, or manufacturing goods. You define what goes into your products (templates), then schedule when to make them (work orders).
Creating Templates
A template is your recipe, formula, or assembly instructions. It defines what you're making, what ingredients or materials go into it, and how much of each you need. Once set up, you can use it over and over to schedule production.
Managing Work Orders
Work orders are how you schedule and track production. Each work order says "make X units of this template at this location by this date." When you complete a work order, Peasy deducts the ingredients and adds the finished product to your inventory.
Template Gap Alerts
Gap alerts tell you when you don't have enough ingredients or materials to complete a production run. They help you plan ahead so you can order what you need before it's time to produce.
Building Blocks and Sub-Assemblies
A building block is a template for an intermediate product — something you make as a step in your production process, then use as an ingredient in a finished good. Think of it like a sub-recipe: you make a batch of sauce, then use that sauce when assembling your final product.
Co-Packer Workflows
A co-packer (or co-manufacturer) is a third-party that produces finished goods for you. Peasy supports the two most common arrangements: you ship raw materials to the co-packer, or the co-packer sources everything themselves. The setup is similar in both cases — the difference is whether your raw materials are tracked through the production run.
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