Track each single spice lot through your blend batches to the finished, dated packs you ship - so a supplier issue on one spice scopes cleanly to every blend it touched.
A blend batch consumes several spice lots at once, and every one stays linked to the finished pack in the genealogy.
Trace a single suspect spice lot forward to every blend batch and finished pack that used it - in one view.
Generate finished-lot labels with lot numbers and best-by dates for each blend you package.
Preview the impact of a spice issue across blends and customers, then contain to hold all affected inventory.
Log each incoming supplier lot with quantity, expiration, and certificate - the lot lands in quarantine until it's inspected and approved.
Start a batch and consume exact approved lots. LotThread blocks anything on hold, expired, or short before it enters production.
Turn a completed batch into finished lots with lot numbers and best-by dates, and generate a label in one click.
Track remaining quantity, location, expiry, and hold/release state so you always know what's clear to ship.
Record customer shipments with the same guardrails, closing the chain from supplier lot to the customer who received it.
Yes. That fan-out is exactly what the genealogy graph is built for: from a single spice lot, trace forward to every blend batch, finished pack, and customer that lot reached.
No. LotThread is the traceability layer that sits alongside QuickBooks, Shopify, and the tools you already use - it connects your materials, batches, and shipments into one record without replacing your books or storefront.
Most producers trace a first product in an afternoon. You set up one product, one supplier, and one production batch, and the genealogy and recall scoping compute from there - no manufacturing ERP rollout required.
Yes. Map your columns once and bulk-import materials, suppliers, and existing lots from a spreadsheet or supplier file, so you start with your real history instead of a blank system.
Replace scattered spreadsheets and production records with one connected history from receiving through shipment.
Begin with one product, one supplier, and one production batch.