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Purchase orders

A purchase orderPurchase orderA supplier order that records what you're buying — variants, quantities, prices, due dates — and the lifecycle from draft through sending, receiving, and closing. Read more → records what you’re buying from one supplier — variants, quantities, prices, due dates — and the lifecycle of that order from draft through received and closed. POs are the single largest workflow in Logistified; this section breaks the surface into focused pages.

A purchase order is not a transfer order. POs go to a supplier and bring inventory in. Transfer orders move existing stock between your own locations.

  • What a purchase order is
  • When to use one
  • What you can do here
  • Key concepts
  • Where to next

A PO has a single supplier and many line items. Each line is one variant with its quantities (ordered, confirmed, received, cancelled, rejected), unit cost, and any per-line metadata. The header tracks status, dates, currency, tax rate, and totals.

POs are stateful: status changes — Draft to Sent to Confirmed to Received to Completed — trigger side effects in Shopify, the supplier’s inbox, and elsewhere in Logistified. The Side effects & integrations page is the full list.

Receiving is quantity-based. You can record a full receipt or receive the same PO in multiple passes as stock arrives, but Logistified does not maintain separate shipment or tracking records for each physical delivery.

  • Replenishing stock from your supplier.
  • Recording an order you’ve already placed elsewhere (manual creation; Mark as Sent (Manual) without emailing).
  • Generating supplier-facing documentation (the PO PDF).
  • Recording full or partial receipts as stock arrives over one or more deliveries.
  • Purchase orderPurchase orderA supplier order that records what you're buying — variants, quantities, prices, due dates — and the lifecycle from draft through sending, receiving, and closing. Read more → — the artifact itself.
  • Line itemLine itemOne row on a purchase, transfer, or return order. Represents one variant with its quantities, unit cost, and any per-line metadata. Read more → — one variant on the PO.
  • OrderedOrdered quantityThe number of units you asked the supplier for on a purchase order line. Set when you create the PO; locked once you send it. Read more → , confirmedConfirmed quantityThe number of units the supplier said they'll ship. Could be less than ordered if the supplier can't fulfil the whole request. Read more → ,receivedReceived quantityThe number of units you actually got. Recorded as the stock arrives. Drives Shopify's on-hand update on each receipt. Read more → , pendingPending quantityWhat's still on its way — confirmed minus already received minus cancelled and rejected. For receiving POs, Logistified also keeps received units that have not yet synced to Shopify on-hand stock in the incoming ledger so they can be retried. Read more → quantity — four ways to count units across the lifecycle.
  • Originating forecast viewOriginating forecast viewThe saved view a purchase order was created from. Useful for audit — "which planning session produced this order?" Read more → — the saved view a PO was created from.
  • ArchivedSoft deleteA record hidden from active workflows but retained for history or audit instead of being permanently removed. Read more → — a PO removed from the active list but kept for audit.
  • Constraint StudioConstraint StudioThe guided rule editor in Settings -> Purchase Orders -> Constraints. It turns business presets into technical constraint graphs for PO hints and optimizer plans. Read more → — Elevate-plan editor for PO rules.
  • Constraint optimizerConstraint optimizerA PO detail tool that builds a proposed additive plan from configured constraint rules. In Fill gaps mode, it can increase existing lines or add eligible variants; you confirm before anything is applied. Elevate-plan feature. Read more → — Elevate-plan tool that proposes additive quantity changes.
  • Supplier creditSupplier creditA balance you have with a supplier — money they owe you, from a return order (RMA) or a manual adjustment. It can be deliberately applied to a future PO with the same supplier and currency. Read more → — a balance with the supplier, applicable to future POs.