How do you know if your integration makes the cut? Look for these three signals:
Edit a product’s price or description in Inflow. How long until that change appears on your live store? Verified integrations support "real-time webhooks" instead of batch processing every 15 minutes.
Inflow Inventory is a powerful tool for stock control, but its value is directly proportional to the quality of its integrations. An unverified connector may save you $50 per month in software costs, but a single inventory desync—selling stock you don't have—can cost thousands in expedited shipping, canceled orders, and lost customer trust.
Verified integrations provide:
Before you connect Inflow to your e-commerce site, shipping carrier, or accounting package, demand to see the verification report. Ask for the test logs of the concurrency, negative stock, and field truncation tests. If the vendor cannot produce them, you are not buying an integration—you are buying a liability.
Your inventory is the truth of your business. Only verified integrations are worthy of that truth.
inFlow Inventory , creating a "piece" or product and integrating it with verified third-party platforms involves a few streamlined steps. Each inFlow plan supports over 102 integrations
, including verified connections for e-commerce, accounting, and shipping. www.softwareadvice.com.au Creating a Product (The "Piece")
Before a product can be synced or used in manufacturing, it must be created within inFlow: Product Types : You can create four types: Creation Methods
: Products can be added via the main product screen, directly while creating a purchase order, or through a Bill of Materials if the piece is part of an assembly. Key Details
: Assign a unique name (1–3 words recommended), SKU, and barcode. You can also add custom fields and units of measure for purchasing vs. selling. Verified Integrations
inFlow bridges inventory management with other business platforms to ensure data stays synchronized across systems. Oracle NetSuite Webinar: Connecting inFlow to Shopify
This feature focuses on creating a Verified Integration Program for inFlow Inventory, designed to give users confidence that third-party connections are secure, up-to-date, and officially supported. Feature: "inFlow Verified" Integrations
ObjectiveTo establish a trust tier for the inFlow integration ecosystem, ensuring that "Verified" apps meet specific standards for data sync reliability, security, and customer support. Key Components
Verification Badge: A distinct "Verified" icon displayed next to integrations in the inFlow App Store or Dashboard.
Performance Benchmarking: Only apps that maintain a sync success rate (e.g., >99%) and low latency receive the badge.
Automated Health Checks: Real-time monitoring that alerts users if a verified integration’s API connection is degraded.
Priority Support: Verified partners must adhere to a specific SLA (Service Level Agreement) to resolve integration-related tickets. User Benefits
Risk Reduction: Users can confidently connect their accounting (QuickBooks), e-commerce (Shopify), or shipping (ShipStation) tools knowing the sync won't break during high-volume periods.
Faster Troubleshooting: If a sync fails, "Verified" status ensures inFlow support has direct documentation and partner contacts to fix the issue.
Streamlined Setup: Verified integrations feature pre-mapped fields, reducing the time spent on manual configuration. Implementation Phases
Phase 1 (Audit): Review current native integrations (Shopify, Amazon, etc.) and grant them the initial "Verified" status.
Phase 2 (Partner Portal): Launch a portal for third-party developers to submit their integrations for testing against inFlow’s "Verified" checklist.
Phase 3 (User UI): Update the inFlow inventory dashboard to allow users to filter by "Verified Only" when searching for new tools.
Should we focus more on the technical requirements for developers to get verified, or the marketing benefits for the end-user?
A verified integration comes with pre-built field mapping templates. For example:
These templates are tested against thousands of transactions. DIY integrations require you to build these maps manually—a process ripe for typos.
Simulate Black Friday. Using a script (or a manual frenzy), create 50 orders in 5 seconds. Verified integrations rely on queue systems (RabbitMQ, Redis) that throttle gracefully. Unverified ones crash.
Why you need it verified: Sales reps promise stock they can't see. The verified benefit: Verified sync pushes live inventory levels into your CRM opportunity view, so your sales team only quotes items with "Verified Stock > On Order."
Set Inflow to "prevent negative inventory." Then, via the integration, try to sell a product that has zero stock. A verified integration will reject the order and send a "low stock" alert back to the store. An unverified one will crash or create a negative quantity.
A simple integration sends quantity. A verified integration sends cost data, shipping fees, and marketplace commissions. This means your profit reports in Inflow actually reflect reality, not a rough estimate.
How do you know if your integration makes the cut? Look for these three signals:
Edit a product’s price or description in Inflow. How long until that change appears on your live store? Verified integrations support "real-time webhooks" instead of batch processing every 15 minutes.
Inflow Inventory is a powerful tool for stock control, but its value is directly proportional to the quality of its integrations. An unverified connector may save you $50 per month in software costs, but a single inventory desync—selling stock you don't have—can cost thousands in expedited shipping, canceled orders, and lost customer trust.
Verified integrations provide:
Before you connect Inflow to your e-commerce site, shipping carrier, or accounting package, demand to see the verification report. Ask for the test logs of the concurrency, negative stock, and field truncation tests. If the vendor cannot produce them, you are not buying an integration—you are buying a liability.
Your inventory is the truth of your business. Only verified integrations are worthy of that truth.
inFlow Inventory , creating a "piece" or product and integrating it with verified third-party platforms involves a few streamlined steps. Each inFlow plan supports over 102 integrations
, including verified connections for e-commerce, accounting, and shipping. www.softwareadvice.com.au Creating a Product (The "Piece") inflow inventory integrations verified
Before a product can be synced or used in manufacturing, it must be created within inFlow: Product Types : You can create four types: Creation Methods
: Products can be added via the main product screen, directly while creating a purchase order, or through a Bill of Materials if the piece is part of an assembly. Key Details
: Assign a unique name (1–3 words recommended), SKU, and barcode. You can also add custom fields and units of measure for purchasing vs. selling. Verified Integrations
inFlow bridges inventory management with other business platforms to ensure data stays synchronized across systems. Oracle NetSuite Webinar: Connecting inFlow to Shopify
This feature focuses on creating a Verified Integration Program for inFlow Inventory, designed to give users confidence that third-party connections are secure, up-to-date, and officially supported. Feature: "inFlow Verified" Integrations
ObjectiveTo establish a trust tier for the inFlow integration ecosystem, ensuring that "Verified" apps meet specific standards for data sync reliability, security, and customer support. Key Components
Verification Badge: A distinct "Verified" icon displayed next to integrations in the inFlow App Store or Dashboard. How do you know if your integration makes the cut
Performance Benchmarking: Only apps that maintain a sync success rate (e.g., >99%) and low latency receive the badge.
Automated Health Checks: Real-time monitoring that alerts users if a verified integration’s API connection is degraded.
Priority Support: Verified partners must adhere to a specific SLA (Service Level Agreement) to resolve integration-related tickets. User Benefits
Risk Reduction: Users can confidently connect their accounting (QuickBooks), e-commerce (Shopify), or shipping (ShipStation) tools knowing the sync won't break during high-volume periods.
Faster Troubleshooting: If a sync fails, "Verified" status ensures inFlow support has direct documentation and partner contacts to fix the issue.
Streamlined Setup: Verified integrations feature pre-mapped fields, reducing the time spent on manual configuration. Implementation Phases
Phase 1 (Audit): Review current native integrations (Shopify, Amazon, etc.) and grant them the initial "Verified" status. Before you connect Inflow to your e-commerce site,
Phase 2 (Partner Portal): Launch a portal for third-party developers to submit their integrations for testing against inFlow’s "Verified" checklist.
Phase 3 (User UI): Update the inFlow inventory dashboard to allow users to filter by "Verified Only" when searching for new tools.
Should we focus more on the technical requirements for developers to get verified, or the marketing benefits for the end-user?
A verified integration comes with pre-built field mapping templates. For example:
These templates are tested against thousands of transactions. DIY integrations require you to build these maps manually—a process ripe for typos.
Simulate Black Friday. Using a script (or a manual frenzy), create 50 orders in 5 seconds. Verified integrations rely on queue systems (RabbitMQ, Redis) that throttle gracefully. Unverified ones crash.
Why you need it verified: Sales reps promise stock they can't see. The verified benefit: Verified sync pushes live inventory levels into your CRM opportunity view, so your sales team only quotes items with "Verified Stock > On Order."
Set Inflow to "prevent negative inventory." Then, via the integration, try to sell a product that has zero stock. A verified integration will reject the order and send a "low stock" alert back to the store. An unverified one will crash or create a negative quantity.
A simple integration sends quantity. A verified integration sends cost data, shipping fees, and marketplace commissions. This means your profit reports in Inflow actually reflect reality, not a rough estimate.