Tag: JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Manufacturing

David Greiner, Principal Product Manager for Oracle JD Edwards Manufacturing, recently spoke about manufacturing activity rules functionality and demonstrated the added capability to write and review history records in the new Work Order Master, Parts List, and Routing Ledger tables. New fields have been added to the recently delivered Work Order Activity Rules for manufacturing to trigger entries into ledger tables at selected statuses when work order records are added, changed, or deleted. This new Work Order Ledger feature simplifies tracking of work order changes (header, parts list, or routing) to satisfy auditing or regulatory requirements.

Quest had the chance to speak with Bruce Bender, ERP System Administrator at Dutch Valley Foods, about the company’s upgrade to JD Edwards EnterpriseOne 9.2.

Lisa Tran from Stoner, Inc. presented a how-to guide for keeping track of costs in manufacturing. When manufacturing and selling products, keeping track of and accounting for all of your costs is extremely important. In her presentation, she covered important topics like:
-The steps of how costing of manufactured items is derived
-How to account for tricky costs
-Pieces that affect basic costing
-Other less-used cost methods
-Advantages and disadvantages of different costing methods

Activity rules functionality for manufacturing work orders will allow a status flow to be defined and enforced similar to what already exists for plant and equipment maintenance work orders and sales and purchase orders has been one of the top enhancement requests for manufacturing from the Quest M&D user group and has recently been delivered. Within JD Edwards manufacturing, there’s always been the ability to prevent transactions beyond a specified status, but nothing to easily prevent a user from changing the status back to one that does allow them and then making the transaction. For example, a closed work order with all of the accounting complete is updated to an open status that allows additional inventory to be issued potentially creating data integrity issues. This will no longer be the case after implementing activity rules. In addition to status flow enforcement, the activity rules allow for locking and freezing work orders according to their status. In this session you will learn everything you need to know about the set up and use of Work Order Activity Rules for Manufacturing.

Sep 26

September E1MDUG SIG Call

SIG Meetings & Calls
Sep 19 @  11:00am

Activity rules functionality for manufacturing work orders will allow a status flow to be defined and enforced similar to what already exists for plant and equipment maintenance work orders and sales and purchase orders has been one of the top enhancement requests for manufacturing from the Quest M&D user group and has recently been delivered.…

105270 Utilizing UDOs and Mobile Applications to Process Work Orders Presented at INFOCUS 19 Just last year, our users were utilizing handwritten, paper JRRs (Job Record Reports) to submit their service orders.  Since then, we have implemented not only an electronic method of capturing this data, but also mobile capabilities with some orchestrations.  This new…

106150 Sync Your Engineers' BOM Data with JD Edwards Presented at INFOCUS 19 Integrate your JD Edwards with your engineers' CAD, PDM and PLM systems! In discrete manufacturing, engineering data such as Item Master and BOM in JD Edwards is mission critical . Many companies are challenged by having these siloed systems that are not…

106160 The B2B Buyer Research Has Spoken: ERP Integrated Commerce Is a Must Presented at INFOCUS 19 In the world of B2B digital commerce, leading industry research shows that 93% of B2B buyers prefer to buy online after making their product decision and over 30% of B2B buyers will favor a supplier that provides accurate…

100760 JD Edwards for Small Business SIG Please visit the JD Edwards for Small Businesses SIG to learn more about our group. We are about making it easier to do your job better. We may all be from different industries but we all share similar problems as small businesses. All of us have tools and…