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Inventory checklist for your first online store

What to track on day one so you do not oversell, lose items, or lose money on stockouts.

Inventory Catalog
6 min read Updated 0001-01-01

Inventory is what stops a store from looking professional or unprofessional. You do not need a warehouse system. You need a clear, simple checklist before launch.

This guide walks through what to track on day one.

What to track for every product

Each product needs:

  • Total quantity available.
  • Variants (size, color, flavor, etc.) and quantity per variant.
  • Low-inventory threshold.
  • Sold-out behavior.
  • Lead time to restock.

These five items cover the common reasons customers get frustrated: ordering something out of stock, getting the wrong variant, or waiting for an unanticipated restock.

Set a low-inventory threshold

For each product, pick a number that means "restock now." It can be 1 for a single-unit gift item, or 25 for a batch of cookies you bake daily.

When inventory crosses below that threshold:

  • You get a notification.
  • The product page may show "Only 3 left" if you want.
  • You start preparing the restock.

Decide what happens when a product sells out

You have three reasonable options:

  • Hide the product from the store.
  • Show "Sold out" with no add-to-cart button.
  • Accept preorders with a clear shipment date.

The right answer depends on your business. Custom or limited-batch sellers often hide the product. Subscription or restock-anticipating sellers often accept preorders.

Track variants carefully

A common first-store mistake is tracking inventory at the product level when variants are sold separately. If you list "T-shirt" with sizes S/M/L, you need 3 inventory counts, not 1.

Variants without separate inventory tracking lead to:

  • Selling more S than you have.
  • Over-promising on a popular color.
  • Manual refunds and "sorry, we ran out" emails.

Account for unfulfilled orders

If 3 customers order a candle and you have 2 left, you cannot ship all 3. Set inventory rules so:

  • Each order reserves its quantity at checkout.
  • The store updates available count immediately.
  • Bundles and gift sets deduct from the right component inventory.

Plan restocking lead times

If a product takes 2 weeks to make or restock, the restock plan needs that buffer. Add restock-trigger reminders to:

  • Recurring time blocks (every 2 weeks for fresh-batch items).
  • Inventory thresholds (when stock drops below 10).
  • Calendar dates for seasonal restocks.

Common inventory mistakes

  • Not tracking variants separately.
  • Forgetting to update inventory after canceled orders.
  • Ignoring preorders sitting in the queue.
  • Counting inventory only when you remember.
  • Hiding sold-out products when restock dates are firm.

Bottom line

Inventory does not have to be fancy. Track each product's count, set variant counts, set a restock threshold, and decide what happens when something sells out. That covers most first-store inventory needs.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need an inventory app to start?

Not for a first store. The store platform itself usually has enough inventory tracking. Add a separate app only if you outgrow the built-in tools.

Should I show 'only 3 left' messaging?

Sometimes. It builds urgency on real low stock, but feels manipulative when used on a product that is always near zero.

What about preorders?

Preorders work when the restock date is firm and the customer knows up front when the order ships. Vague preorders erode trust.

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