Rifleman & Sandra
Rifleman Rifleman
Sandra, I’ve been looking over the resupply cycle for our ammo stocks and think tightening the intervals could cut downtime significantly—what’s your take on an optimal cadence?
Sandra Sandra
I suggest a 14‑day cadence, color‑code the calendar in bright orange for the high‑intensity check days, and put a weekly audit on Monday mornings. That keeps the ammo within the safe window and eliminates surprise downtime. Also label the resupply boxes by shelf life, shortest first, so the most urgent items are always visible. That’s the only way to keep the cycle smooth and predictable.
Rifleman Rifleman
Good plan. Orange on the calendar will make the high‑intensity days hard to miss, and a Monday audit keeps everything fresh. Prioritizing by shelf life eliminates waste, so that’s solid. We'll roll it out and monitor for any slips.
Sandra Sandra
Sounds like the perfect setup—just make sure the labels stay in ascending order and double‑check the audit list before the first Monday. Keep everything in order and we’ll stay on schedule.
Rifleman Rifleman
Will do. We'll keep the labels in ascending order, run a full audit before Monday, and stick to the plan. No slip‑ups. We'll stay on schedule.
Sandra Sandra
Great, just keep the audit sheet on top of the pile and confirm the shelf‑life order before each check. We’ll stay on track.
Rifleman Rifleman
Got it. Audit sheet on top, shelf‑life order checked every time. We’ll stay on track.
Sandra Sandra
Excellent, keep the audit sheet front and center and double‑check the order each time. We’ll stay on track.