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Originally published on October 20, 2023 Last updated on March 6, 2026

Suppliers and Demand: Introducing Vendor Feeds at Finale Inventory

Looking for a hack to streamline operations between you and your suppliers? Get excited for Vendor Feeds in Finale. What can vendor feeds do for you? How will it improve your business’s inventory management? Let’s explore further… Vendor Feeds 101: The Lowdown Vendor Feeds serve as a data bridge between vendors and sellers, enabling suppliers […]
Young delivery man using digital tablet for scanning bar code on package label while preparing for shipment with his coworker.
Young delivery man using digital tablet for scanning bar code on package label while preparing for shipment with his coworker.

Looking for a hack to streamline operations between you and your suppliers? Get excited for Vendor Feeds in Finale. What can vendor feeds do for you? How will it improve your business’s inventory management? Let’s explore further…

Vendor Feeds 101: The Lowdown

Vendor Feeds serve as a data bridge between vendors and sellers, enabling suppliers to seamlessly push their stock levels to Finale Inventory users, who can then automatically push these levels to various selling platforms. This ensures continuous stock synchronization, eliminating the hassles of manual updates, the risk of discrepancies, or delayed inventory updates.

Imagine you’re a seller working with multiple suppliers, from local artisans to international manufacturers—each of these suppliers have varying product availability. Instead of manually reaching out to each supplier for stock updates or awaiting their reports, supplier feeds automate this, ensuring you have the latest data at your fingertips.

Historically, this process required brands to obtain stock levels manually, followed by regular bulk imports—a tedious, error-prone system. Vendor feeds transform this process, making data integration a reality in a matter of seconds vs potentially hours.

Diving Deeper: Benefits for Finale Users

Enhanced Selling Dynamics

With vendor feeds, sellers can smoothly sell products by leveraging the automated data feeds, eliminating any need for manual interventions.

Overselling Prevention

Real-time stock updates ensure that you never promise what you can’t deliver. This not only protects your revenue but also bolsters your brand reputation.

Optimized Product Listings and SKU Expansion

By tapping into data from various suppliers, sellers can present a broader spectrum of products, thus amplifying sales potential and revenue. Furthermore, sellers can confidently venture into new product lines or categories with vendor feeds. This is all without the typical risks associated with warehouse product build-up, allowing you to diversify your offerings based on continuous data directly from your suppliers.

Reduced Manual Labor

Especially beneficial for businesses using dropshipping or rapid reordering models, the automation eliminates several manual steps, freeing up time and resources.

Vendor Feeds: Setup, Support, and Specifics

Utilizing Vendor Feeds is a breeze, and all it takes is a simple, one-time setup to get things started. One crucial step involves setting up FTP to seamlessly read your supplier’s files, ensuring your inventory is in perfect sync. For the full setup process, head over to our help article.

Wondering which vendors we’re already in business with? We pride ourselves on having an extensive lineup of vendor feeds to cater to diverse needs. Names like Automatic Distributors and Western Power Sports are already on our integrated list, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg. What makes our system genuinely flexible is its ability to support any vendor that provides an inventory file via FTP in the CSV/excel format. We can even set up the feed if you receive updates via email, dropbox, or Google Drive—setting up these feeds is a total walk in the park.

If you’re thinking about a specific connection or have a unique requirement in mind, remember: we’re all ears. Reach out to us anytime, and we’ll do our best to create a solution that fits your needs: service@finaleinventory.com

Evolving with Finale Inventory

A significant advantage of Finale Inventory is its adaptability. Staying ahead of the curve isn’t just about having the right products; it’s about leveraging the right tools to predict, adapt, and capitalize. With supplier feeds, we’re enabling businesses to access real-time insights into their inventory. 

By removing the tedious manual aspects of inventory and vendor management, we free up your time. But it’s more than just time saved; it’s about where that time can be reinvested. You can innovate by researching and introducing new product lines that resonate with your target audience. You can strategize by analyzing the data, identifying purchasing patterns, and optimizing marketing efforts to tap into potential growth areas. And when it comes to success? It’s about increased sales, higher customer satisfaction, and brand growth in a saturated market.

So, with Finale Inventory by your side, you’re not just managing your stock – you’re optimizing your business approach. Here’s to simpler processes and bigger successes with Finale.

“The core of maturity, that I see, is starting with a unified view of inventory. I’ve got to be able to accurately represent what do I have, make sure that I know where it’s located so I can get it to my customers quickly.”

— Troy Graham, Descartes

What is the first thing I should fix if I want to scale operations?

Start with a unified view of inventory. The core of maturity starts with being able to accurately represent what you do have and make sure that you know where it’s located to get it to customers quickly. Without a unified view across your warehouses, 3PLs, and vendors, you cannot make the best decisions because you don’t have the best information at hand.

With Inventory Visibility, Businesses Can Make Smarter Allocation Decisions

Once inventory is centralized, businesses can move from reactive updates to intentional allocation. They can decide how much inventory to expose to each channel, when to use buffers, which marketplaces need extra protection, and how seasonality or campaign performance influence availability.

Once I know what inventory I have, how should I decide where to make it available?

Inventory allocation should reflect where orders are coming from, where marketing is working, and which channels carry the most risk. Once you know what you have and where it is located, you can think more strategically using centralized inventory to make prioritization happen automatically. One fertilizer company lost a little over 5,000 orders in one weekend because someone manually uploaded the wrong available inventory to Amazon.

Better Inventory Data Improves Planning, Purchasing, and Growth Bets

Better visibility turns inventory data into a planning tool. With insight into sales velocity, inventory levels, vendors, and channel performance, businesses can make more informed replenishment decisions, avoid overbuying, and test new product lines or vendor-supplied inventory without taking on unnecessary risk.

“You have to have unified inventory to know how to price your products just at that basic level. I can’t price my products if I don’t know the true cost to get it.”

— Mike Bernico, Flxpoint

How does better inventory data help me make smarter buying decisions?

It lets you measure whether your plan is working before you commit more capital. A key question becomes: “Did my plan work? Am I overleveraged in one place or another?” Centralized systems can also help businesses test new product lines or vendor relationships by looking at sales velocity by channel, allowing them to take risks in a calculated and measured way.

Intelligent Order Routing Turns Inventory Complexity Into Automation

Once inventory and supplier data are reliable, businesses can automate fulfillment decisions. Orders can be routed based on cost, speed, margin, location, warehouse priority, vendor fallback, split-shipment rules, or customer expectations. This helps hybrid fulfillment scale because every order does not need a manual review.

How do I decide the best way to fulfill each order?

There is no single answer, which is why order routing needs to account for the context of each order. Intelligent order routing is not just sending an order to someone who has stock; it is taking each and every order and treating it like its own unique use case. Depending on the order, the business may prioritize speed, margin, an internal warehouse, vendor fallback, or preventing split shipments.

Supplier Inventory Sync Extends Inventory Beyond the Four Walls

For hybrid fulfillment to work, supplier inventory needs to become part of the operating model. Supplier sync does not always require advanced technology; it can happen through automated files, FTP, email, APIs, EDI, or ecommerce storefront integrations. The key is replacing manual updates with automated, reliable supplier data.

Can supplier inventory really be treated like part of my own inventory?

Yes, but the goal is not necessarily to force every supplier into a complex integration. Real-time supplier sync can be defined as any way to get an automated update from a supplier, such as Google Sheets, email, FTP, API, EDI, or ecommerce storefront connections. The key is that accurate supplier stock is foundational. If you don’t have an accurate view of what is in stock with your suppliers, you cannot tell your sales channel accurately what’s available.

Exception-Based Workflows Keep Humans Focused Where They Matter

Automation does not remove people from the process. Mature operations let technology handle the routine majority while humans focus on exceptions, such as high-value orders, fraud risk, compliance requirements, restricted products, export rules, or unusual fulfillment scenarios.

If my business has special cases, can automation still work?

Yes. The point is not to automate every possible decision; it is to automate the routine work and surface the exceptions. Businesses should not have to look at every single order. Instead, technology can highlight high-value orders, risky locations, or compliance requirements. The goal is to take care of the 80% of workflows that are obvious while still allowing human review when specific exceptions arise.

The Right Inventory Technology Should Fit the Business, Not Overwhelm It

Software decisions should be based on business fit, not popularity, feature volume, or broad “all-in-one” promises. Growing ecommerce businesses should identify their highest-impact bottleneck, prioritize what matters now, and choose technology that is right-sized but flexible enough to support future phases of growth.

How should I choose software without overbuying or picking the wrong system?

Start with your priorities, not the biggest feature list. Avoid an all-in-one system that claims to “do everything under the sun” and look for a “best of breed approach” with systems that can scale as you add channels or vendors. The practical advice is to stack rank what matters now, make sure the system can support future phases, and choose technology that fits your business rather than overwhelming it.

How to Scale Ecommerce Operations Beyond Spreadsheets

For many growing ecommerce businesses, Finale and Flxpoint work together as a practical answer to these challenges. Finale helps centralize and manage internal inventory, purchasing, warehouse operations, and stock visibility, while Flxpoint helps connect vendor inventory, automate supplier sync, and route orders across hybrid fulfillment networks. Together, they give businesses a best-of-breed way to improve inventory accuracy, reduce spreadsheet work, and scale fulfillment without forcing every process into a one-size-fits-all system.

Ecommerce Fulfillment Operations FAQ

What Is Ecommerce Fulfillment Operations?

Ecommerce fulfillment operations are the processes that move an online order from purchase to delivery. This includes managing inventory, syncing product availability across channels, routing orders to the right warehouse, 3PL, supplier, or vendor, and making sure the customer receives the right product on time. As discussed in the webinar, fulfillment is no longer limited to “what’s in my warehouse these days”; growing businesses may rely on internal warehouses, 3PLs, marketplace fulfillment services, and supplier inventory at the same time.

What Are Ecommerce Fulfillment Operation Examples?

Examples of ecommerce fulfillment operations include updating inventory across Shopify, Amazon, Walmart, and other sales channels; allocating inventory to specific marketplaces; sending orders to an internal warehouse, 3PL, or vendor; syncing supplier inventory through files, APIs, EDI, email, or FTP; replenishing warehouse stock based on sales velocity; and flagging exceptions such as high-value orders, compliance requirements, or restricted products. In the webinar, the speakers also discussed hybrid fulfillment examples where a business may fulfill some products from its own warehouse and use vendors as a fallback or extension of available inventory.

How Can I Track My Inventory at an Ecommerce Fulfillment Center?

The best way to track inventory at an ecommerce fulfillment center is to create a unified inventory view that shows what is available, where it is located, and how that inventory connects to each sales channel. That means tracking inventory across internal warehouses, fulfillment centers, 3PLs, marketplace fulfillment programs, and supplier locations instead of relying on disconnected spreadsheets. The webinar emphasized that businesses need to “accurately represent” what they have and know where it is located so they can get products to customers quickly.

How Can I Connect My Inventory to My Supplier?

You can connect supplier inventory through several methods, depending on what the supplier supports. The webinar discussed low-tech and advanced options, including automated Excel or CSV files, Google Sheets, email updates, FTP servers, APIs, EDI, and direct connections to ecommerce storefronts such as Shopify, BigCommerce, or Magento. The key is to ask suppliers how they share inventory today, then use a system that can automate that data flow instead of manually copying supplier inventory into spreadsheets.

What Is Ecommerce Order Routing?

Ecommerce order routing is the process of deciding where an order is fulfilled from after a customer buys. In a simple operation, every order may go to one warehouse. In a more complex or hybrid fulfillment model, the best fulfillment source may depend on inventory availability, shipping speed, cost, margin, customer location, warehouse priority, vendor fallback rules, or whether the order should be split. The webinar described intelligent order routing as treating each order like its own use case, so businesses can automate the best fulfillment decision without manually reviewing every order.

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Ready to Take Control of Your Inventory?

Improve inventory, warehouse, and ecommerce operations today.

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