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Is there an easy way to create a bouquet from different kind of flowers (goods) create a set. We have a flower store, we use the application “inventory” where we keep a record of each flower. The florist also uses the “POS” application where he can sell a bouquet to a customer by selecting each flower piece by piece. But how to collect a bouquet of flowers in advance and put it on the showcase (fix the set, give the price, name) and sell it, remove its constituent flowers from the availability.

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I love reading and watching It ends with us. Imagine Lily bloom's using Odoo to manage her inventory and me as a consultant, we'd have a beautiful chapter in "It ends with BOM".


Chapter 100: The Bouquet Paradox

SettingThe air in Lily Blooms’ shop hangs heavy with the scent of roses and frustration. Lily, sleeves rolled up to her elbows, scowls at her POS terminal. A half-finished bouquet of peonies and eucalyptus sits abandoned on the counter. Enter Econodoo, clutching a laptop like a lifeline.

Lily: (gesturing sharply at the screen) “I don’t care if the system says I have 50 white roses. They’re here, in the cooler, but half are already tied into bouquets! If I sell one of those bouquets in POS, how do I make sure the roses, the baby’s breath, the ribbon—all of it—disappear from stock? Right now, it’s chaos. The numbers lie.”

Econodoo: (softly, closing the shop door behind her) “They’re not lying. They’re just… trapped in the wrong story.”

Lily pauses, her fingers still tangled in a thorny stem. Econodoo sets her laptop on the counter, the screen glowing like a jar of fireflies.

Econodoo: “Your bouquets aren’t just flowers, Lily. They’re a transformation. Once you twist those stems together, add the wrapper, the labor—they become something new. Something that can’t be un-made. Right?”

Lily: (defiant) “Yes. If a bouquet comes back unsold, I can’t just dismantle it. The roses wilt. The ribbon frays. It’s wasted.”

Econodoo: (nodding) “Then we need to treat bouquets like what they are: manufactured products. Not kits. Not combos. Finished goods.”

Lily: (skeptical) “But manufacturing sounds like… factories. Conveyor belts. This is a flower shop.”

Econodoo: (smiling) “Think of it like baking a cake. You don’t sell flour, eggs, and sugar separately after mixing them. You sell the cake. Odoo’s Bill of Materials is your recipe. The Manufacturing Order is you baking it.”

She spins the laptop to show a blueprint of a bouquet—roses, ferns, wrapping paper—all tied to a single product: “Midnight Serenade.”

Econodoo: “When you create this bouquet, Odoo subtracts 12 roses, 5 ferns, and 1 meter of ribbon from inventory. The bouquet becomes its own item. With its own shelf life, price, and soul. When it sells in POS, only the bouquet leaves stock. No ghosts of roses haunting your reports.”

Lily: (traces the screen, hesitant) “But what if I want to make 10 bouquets in the morning? Do I have to click 10 times?”

Econodoo: “One click. Schedule a batch. Like prepping dough at dawn so it’s ready by noon. And if a bouquet… doesn’t sell…”

Lily: (quietly) “It dies here. On the shelf.”

Econodoo: “Yes. But Odoo will show you that death plainly. No false hope. You’ll see the rot in your stock logs, adjust orders, trim waste. No more guessing.”

Lily: (after a long silence) “What about the cost? The time I spend arranging?”

Econodoo: “Add labor as a component. 30 minutes of florist work. The Manufacturing Order absorbs it. Your COGS will reflect the truth: that bouquets cost more than just flowers.”

Outside, dusk stains the sky. Lily picks up the abandoned bouquet, runs a thumb over its frayed ribbon.

Lily: “So this… Midnight Serenade… becomes its own creature. Lives and dies in the system.”

Econodoo: “Yes. But first, it has to be born.”

Epilogue:

The next morning, Lily Blooms’ POS glows with new products: “Dawn’s Whisper,” “Storm’s Embrace,” “Velvet Regret.” Each a constellation of flowers, ribbon, and time. The inventory, for the first time, breathes in sync with the coolers.

Somewhere, a bouquet dies unsold. The system mourns in red text. Lily learns to let go.

Final Line:

“Not all transformations are reversible. But at least now, she could see the thorns.”

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