Important Terms:
Harvest Unit is one of the new features found in Connect. The harvest unit is what you and your crew use to quantify how much of a product to harvest when you fill orders. For example, if you sell potatoes in 5 lb bags, 20 lb boxes and 800 lb bins, you may set your harvest unit to "pounds." You can also choose your harvest unit to be "bushels", "totes", or anything else that suits your harvesting method.
The Harvest Pick List will convert orders for all your different selling units of a product into a single quantity of Harvests Units needed to fill those orders.
Product Type: There are three Product Types:
- Type A: For products that have multiple selling units that pull from a shared availability (of the base unit).
- Type B: For Products that are sold by their exact weight. An estimated weight is entered for each selling unit, which can be edited after the product is sold.
- Type C: For products that have multiple selling units, where each selling unit has it's own availability and price. (Default)
Base Unit: Describes the selling units of a product. Selling units that describe specific quantities (like "Head," "1 lb. Jar" or "12 ct. Case") can be described using the base unit "Each." Selling units that describe weights (like "25 lb. Case," "1 lb. Package" or "8oz. Bag") can be described using the base unit "Pounds." When creating a product you need to specify a base unit. Availability of Type A priced products is determined by their base unit. Products that need to be sold for their exact weight (using Type B pricing) need to have "Pounds" as their base unit.
Selling Unit: Describes how and what the customer will purchase when they purchase a product. A Lettuce product might have a "Head" selling unit, and a "12 ct. Case" selling unit. A Ground Beef product might have a "1 lb. Package" and a "5 lb. Package" selling unit. Selling units can also be used to offer a variety of colors, flavors, etc. When creating a product you'll need to setup at least 1 selling unit (you can set up as many as you need).
Multiplier: Used when pricing and listing Type A products. Multipliers describe how much of the base unit is constituted by the selling unit. If you were to setting up a Red Potato product with a base unit of Pounds that had three selling units (5 lb. Bag, 20 lb. Case, 50 lb. Case) the multipliers for each selling unit would be as follows:
- 5 lb. Bag = Multiplier of 5
- 20 lb. Case = Multiplier of 20
- 50 lb. Case = Multiplier of 50
This would allow you to list the total number of pounds of Red Potatoes you had available, and the system would use the multipliers to determine how many of each Selling Unit was available. As selling units are sold, the multipliers are used to determine how much of the base unit should be removed from availability.
Unit Weight: For Type B products the unit weight is an average that is multiplied by the unit price to give the product price displayed on the storefront. This weight can later be edited by the producer or an admin to reflect the exact weight and price of the product. For Type A and C products the weight is optional and purely informational for admins. If A and C type product units are given weights, those weights will be included in order item reports and can be used to find the total weight sold of a product.
Deposit: An additional amount of money that will be collected for each unit of the product sold. All product units have the same deposit amount. Taxes and markups do not apply to deposits. Deposits show up as separate amounts in Revenue reports and the Deposits Collected by Producer report.
Attributes: Attributes set up by the market administrator can be applied to the product.
Sub-periods: For markets that use sub-periods, the choose which of the subperiods the producer participates in to make this product available for.
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