Between yesterday and today, I've already got about 8 hours of my time into setting it up, and I'm not done yet. Basically, what I've created is a file with mulitple sheets in it, one sheet per caliber. Under each caliber, I have multiple columns to describe an item on hand—manufacturer, bullet weight, bullet type, etc., etc.—each row representing one item you have on hand. The bottom row gives a sum total on hand for that caliber. Whereever possible, I have reduced the field to a pulldown menu, so all you have to do is select from the list, instead of repetetively typing everything out. Hand entry is reduced to the quantity field, a date field, and an "additional details" field.
The file is of course editable, so you can add or delete selections from a pulldown, add or delete rows from the table in a particular sheet, or add or delete caliber sheets depending on your own circumstances. I have set it up for the following calibers, because that is what I have on hand, but you can very easily copy a sheet to add another caliber, or delete a sheet for a caliber you don't need:
- .308 Winchester/7.62 NATO
- .223 Remington/5.56 NATO
- .30 Carbine
- .22 LR
- 7.62x54 Russian
- .45 ACP
- 9mm
- .38 Special
- .357 Magnum
- .44 Special
- .44 Magnum
- 12 Gauge
- 20 Gauge
The columns (so far) include:
- Manufacturer
- Caliber (is it .308, or 7.62 NATO?, etc.)
- Bullet Weight (or total shot weight for shotshells)
- Bullet type (or shot type for shotshells)
- Pressure (Standard, +P, etc.)
- Quantity
- "additional details"
- Date In/Out
Some of the time spent on this consisted of repeatedly going back and "upgrading" what I started out with as I began to require solutions to speed my own inventory process. In the end, I will have spent a lot more time creating the file than I would have on completing the inventory by hand, but it will greatly simplify and speed up my ongoing inventory tracking, which will help me to be more diligent about maintaining it going forward.....and whom among us has no use for something to make diligence easier, right?
What you would be receiving is simply a spreadsheet file, not a fancy app. If there were enough interest to develop an app, I might tackle it, but it would have to be a LOT of people to make it worth the effort for me. Because I keep the file stored in iCloud, it is accessible to me across all of my devices. If you didn't have an iCloud account, you could store it on Google Docs, Dropbox, or some other similar service where it could be available to you across platforms. I am building the file in Apple Numbers, but it would be available as either a Numbers file, or a Microsoft Excel file. Basically, it is a matter of A) whether or not this would be useful to you, and B) what your own time is worth if it would be useful. I would manage online payment for it through Paypal. I already know that Paypal is a problem for some of you, but I've already got a Paypal account and I'm not going to bother going through all the complexities of setting up another merchant processing account for this. The only other possibility is using my SQUARE device for accepting a credit card in a FTF sale.... in which case the cost would be whatever the price is, plus a card processing charge. If you refuse to deal with Paypal, simply answer "No" to the poll, and you can set up your own file.
The file would be delivered along with a link to a page with simple instructions for editing some of the field parameters.
So my question to you guys is, if you could pay a small amount to purchase a spreadsheet file like that as opposed to the hours and hours and hours it would take to create it (creating the logic process itself being part of the creative time involved), would you be willing to do pay for such a file? By "small amount", I'm thinking of something in the range of $5-$10. Keep in mind that if your answer to the poll is "Yes, depends, if you added XYZ calibers", that would drive my selling price up because I am balancing the price to you against the value of my time to me. I can't possibly account for all brands, all calibers, all bullet types/weights, etc., etc., etc., but I have deliberately tried to make it easy to customize for your own needs, if they are different from mine. You just have to know how to use your spreadsheet application.
This file could possibly be adapted to inventory other things as well, such as fasteners, pipe fittings, and other hardware items, gun parts, etc., in which case, I've done the ground-work, but you're on your own to modify it to your needs.
None of this is genius at work. It really boils down to what you thing your own time is worth, and would a small price make it attractive in light of the value of your own time. I have put it up here as a poll to gauge interest because the membership here is about as focused a market sample as I could want for this kind of thing. You can select up to 3 of the 5 possible answers