How suppliers, distributors, and trade businesses move stock smarter, reduce risk, and speed up sales.
Consignment stock is a supply-chain model where the supplier owns the stock, but it sits physically at the customer’s location. The customer only pays when the stock sells or is used.
This gives
It’s inventory without friction.
Managing consignment stock means tracking:
Every action needs a timestamp, an ownership state, and a clean audit trail.
Without a structured system, this becomes messy fast.
Suppliers (Consignors)
Customers (Consignees)
An ERP is designed to run an entire business. It’s a broad, powerful system built to manage inventory, sales orders, warehouses, channels, accounting integrations, and reporting, all under one roof. When it comes to consignment, ERPs can support it, but only as a configuration: extra locations, manual transfers, workarounds, and rules that assume one owner and one source of truth. It works, but it’s engineered from an internal-control mindset, not a shared-ownership one.
Consigna is different by design. It isn’t trying to be everything — it’s a precision tool built specifically for consignment workflows. Shared agreements, locked reconciliation cycles, dual-party visibility, and real-time stock accountability aren’t add-ons or hacks; they’re the foundation. Consigna assumes stock will live outside your four walls, that ownership and usage are split, and that trust must be enforced by the system, not spreadsheets, emails, or “we’ll sort it out at month-end.”
The difference comes down to intent. If consignment is a small edge case inside a much larger operational machine, an ERP makes sense. But if consignment is a strategic growth model — driving availability, reducing friction, and strengthening supplier-customer relationships — then a general-purpose ERP will always feel heavy and awkward. Consigna delivers a smoother, lower-pain, more accurate way to run consignment because it was built for that job, and only that job, from day one.
Consignment operates in defined periods. Each cycle records:
If cycles aren’t tight, errors multiply and disputes follow.
Businesses that follow the following process, experience fewer errors and faster replenishment:
Wherever stock needs to be close to the customer, consignment thrives.
Consignment isn’t just a stock model. It’s a smarter way to do business.
If cycles aren’t tight, errors multiply and disputes follow.
Modern supply chains often involve multiple layers: suppliers, wholesalers, sub-consignees, and field technicians. This guide explains how multi-entity consignment works and how to manage it effectively.
A clear explanation of the consignment relationship: who owns the stock, who holds it, who uses it, and when payment is triggered.
Stockholding is one of the largest hidden expenses in supply-chain-driven businesses. This guide details the true cost of holding inventory and how shifting stock closer to demand through consignment lowers costs while increasing sales.
The electrical and lighting supply chain is fast-moving, fragmented, and heavily dependent on immediate product availability. Consignment stock solves the visibility, availability, and capital-loading issues that restrict sales, but only if the process is managed systematically.