End-of-shift stock checks often feel like punishment — counting bottles while staff want to go home, comparing numbers to a notebook that does not match what the system says. A shift inventory report ties opening stock, sales during the shift, and expected closing count into one deterministic view so variance is a math problem, not a blame game.
Bizflow's demo shows a Saturday inventory report inside the active timeline: for each product, what you had at shift start, what sold during the shift, and what you should physically have when you count the shelf. This guide explains how to read that report and use it in Kenyan restaurants, bars, and liquor retail.
What the shift inventory report shows
For each stock-tracked item, the report typically includes:
- Opening quantity — stock at the beginning of the timeline (shift)
- Units sold — decremented by POS sales during that shift
- Expected closing — opening minus sales (plus any adjustments posted in the window)
In the demo, a beer line shows thirteen units at shift open, two sold during service, expected closing of eleven. If a physical count finds ten, you investigate one unit — tonight, not at month-end when memory has faded.
That clarity is why shift inventory report Kenya operators adopt POS inventory instead of weekly guesswork.
How it differs from a full stock take
A stock take is a deliberate count event — often monthly or after delivery — where you set system quantity to match physical reality.
The shift inventory report is operational: it answers "given what we started with and what we sold on the POS, what should be on hand right now?"
Use both:
- Shift report nightly for high-value or fast-moving lines (spirits, beer, premium ingredients).
- Full stock take weekly or after large deliveries to correct drift.
Bizflow records stock take adjustments with user and timestamp in the inventory movement trail — separate from but complementary to shift reports.
Pairing with product sales report
The same shift in Bizflow offers a product sales view: units sold, revenue, cost, and profit estimate per line. Together they tell a complete story:
- Product sales → which lines made money
- Inventory report → whether physical stock matches what sales imply
If product sales show five bottles of a whisky line but inventory expected closing is off by three, you have shrinkage, unrecorded comps, or a misconfigured pour — not a vague "we're losing stock somewhere."
Who should run the report each night
Bar managers — beer and spirits before locking the bar.
Store keepers — wines & spirits shops before handover to night security.
Restaurant managers — key kitchen ingredients if you track portions (optional depth depends on your setup).
The report should take minutes if staff recorded sales correctly all night. If it takes hours, your problem is daytime process — not the report.
Reading variance without accusing staff
When expected closing does not match physical count:
- Recount — double-count error is common at 11 PM.
- Check unposted deliveries — did a crate arrive without goods-received entry?
- Review voids and comps on high-variance SKUs.
- Compare to kitchen docket waste — breakage should be an adjustment, not silent loss.
- Talk to the seller with data — movement history shows who sold each unit.
Bizflow's movement audit lets you drill from variance to individual sale lines — essential for liquor and bar operations.
Timelines and shift names
Inventory reports are scoped to the active timeline — Saturday lunch, Saturday evening, or whatever name you chose when closing the previous shift. Bizflow does not force calendar midnight as your business boundary.
If you run morning and evening shifts with different staff, close the morning timeline before evening service so inventory math does not blend two teams into one confusing bucket.
Read more in our guide on custom shift timelines.
Offline and export
Shift inventory data lives on the local database. Generate and review reports without internet. Export alongside overview PDFs for owners or partners who want email copies — Bizflow PRO can automate report emailing; offline tiers still print and export locally.
Practical adoption plan
Week 1: Track only top ten SKUs — beer, flagship spirits, mixers.
Week 2: Add premium bottles with shrinkage risk.
Week 3: Train closing manager to run inventory report before cash drop.
Week 4: Set variance thresholds — investigate anything above two units on spirits, five on beer cases.
Within a month, expected closing becomes a habit staff respect because numbers match when process is honest.
Bottom line
The shift inventory report turns "I think we have eleven left" into "the system expects eleven because we opened with thirteen and sold two." That is the standard serious Kenyan hospitality should hold.
Bizflow builds this report into the same timeline module used for sales overview and product sales — one shift, one truth, multiple lenses.
Download Bizflow to run your first Saturday inventory report, or explore wines & spirits POS features if bottle variance is your primary pain.
Ready to try Bizflow on your outlet?
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