Inventory engagements by AvanSaber

InventoryPath is where AvanSaber’s inventory practice publishes its writing. We also engage with companies who need expert hands on their inventory operations, not just reading material.

Three engagement shapes cover most of what we do. Each links to its own page with scope, deliverables, timeline, and a path to start a conversation.

Inventory Implementation

Full-project engagements where we implement an inventory solution against a defined operational outcome. WMS rollout, ERP-inventory integration, multichannel sync architecture, AI-native inventory automation, custom builds.

Typical duration: 8 to 16 weeks for mid-market; 4 to 9 months for enterprise. Project-based pricing.

Learn more about Inventory Implementation

Inventory Audits

Point-in-time engagements where we review your inventory operations, systems, and data integrity, and deliver a written report with findings and a prioritized roadmap.

Typical duration: 3 to 6 weeks. Fixed-fee or scoped-effort pricing.

Learn more about Inventory Audits

Inventory Advisory

Ongoing engagements where we provide strategic guidance, vendor selection support, executive alignment, and change leadership. Includes fractional inventory leadership for organizations between full-time CIOs.

Typical duration: monthly retainer or project-based; multi-month arrangements common.

Learn more about Inventory Advisory

How we start

Every engagement starts with a discovery conversation. We listen for the actual problem, scope against the customer’s workflow, and confirm whether AvanSaber’s inventory practice is the right fit.

Book a discovery conversation or describe your situation at [email protected].

Why us

The writing on InventoryPath comes from the same people who run the engagements. The deep-tech posts on bitemporal inventory ledgers, event-sourced inventory, warehouse slotting, and available-to-promise under concurrency are not marketing content; they are notes from production work, edited for publication. When you engage AvanSaber’s inventory practice, you get the engineers who wrote them.

That is not the only credential that matters, but it is the one most relevant to the conversation: can the people you hire actually do the work. The published writing answers that.