Closed-loop flow
Manufacturing Excel template
Production operations: How the same work order workbook becomes screens
Consultation
We can help you sort out which parts should stay in Excel and which parts should move into a web system, based on work order count, progress items, completion items, and audit history. We can also tune the columns to match your current work order sheet.
If you need team collaboration, mobile data entry, photo uploads, corrective action reminders, or dashboards, view the systemized version.
A free Excel template for work order registration, progress checks, material issue, QC and rework, completion checks, and variance issues. Open the detail page to review the free download and page preview.
Ready to overwrite
Auto summarized
Align the work order basics first
Align the work order number, item, quantity, and due date first, and the tracking flow becomes much more stable.
Free download
See what is inside the Excel version first
A free Excel template that keeps work order registration, dashboard summary, progress checks, material issue, QC and rework, completion checks, and variance issues in one workbook. After downloading, start by standardizing statuses, priorities, and departments in Settings.
Work Order Tracking Template.xlsx
File name: manufacturing_work_order_tracking_template_en.xlsx
Set up the dropdown lists first, then register work orders.
What work order workbooks look like in Excel
When work order intake, progress checks, completion checks, and issue follow-up stay in one flow, it becomes much easier to prevent misses.
Work order intake
First decide the work order number and due date so the tracking flow has a clear baseline.
Progress check
Collect each progress item so delays and bottlenecks are easier to spot.
Completion check
Keep completion checks and photos together so confirmation waits do not pile up.
Issue follow-up
Keep issue details and resolution history so it can also support monthly reporting.