Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app
Asset & Equipment Survey Mobile App: Overview
To enable users in the field to easily collect asset data, deploy the Archibus Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app, which works in conjunction with the applications of the Assets domain.
With this mobile app, field auditors can survey the facility and use their smart phones and mobile devices to record the equipment items and assets as they actually exist. They can then upload this data to the Archibus server so that a facility manager can compare the survey results to the electronic inventory, investigate problems, and update the official electronic inventory with the audit results.
Note: If your site chooses to provide floor plan drawings to auditors to help them easily locate the areas to visit, it is recommended that the auditors run the Asset & Equipment Survey app on a tablet and not a smart phone. This is due to the size limitations of smart phone screens.
Note: The Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app works in conjunction the Asset Portal, Assets, or Enterprise Assets applications or Assets SaaS module. Your site should have a license for one of these products so that mobile users can access the equipment inventory developed in Web Central and update it using the Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app.
Users working with the Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app will find that it has an intuitive interface and messages to walk them through its use. For facility managers and others involved in managing assets, this topic overviews the Asset & Equipment Survey mobile app and how to use it to update the electronic inventory. You will also want to review:
- Conducting Equipment Surveys Using the Asset & Equipment Survey Mobile App
- Asset & Equipment Survey Mobile App: Facility Manager Tasks
Why survey your equipment and assets?
In the day-to-day operation of a facility, the status of assets and equipment and its location can change such that the electronic inventory becomes out of date. One contributing factor to an out-of date inventory is employees moving or trading assets and equipment among themselves without notifying the facilities manager. For example:
- a lamp may break and rather requesting that it be repaired, its owner can take one from a vacant desk
- a department printer can be moved to a new location to make room for a temporary worker
- a projector can be left in the conference room and not be returned to its proper location for week
- a worker can use their laptop as their main system and pack away the PC at their desk
To avoid discrepancies between the electronic inventory and the real-world situation, many sites periodically survey their facility to note the location of assets and equipment.
Surveys can also be helpful when initially starting your electronic inventory of equipment items. You can survey your existing items, and then create the official electronic inventory from the survey results.
Although field auditors performing an asset and equipment survey will find the interface intuitive and will not need documentation on using the mobile app, it is helpful for facility managers to understand the complete process, as described below.
Inventory and audit tables
When working with the survey feature, remember that the actual equipment inventory is stored in inventory tables on the server. When you create a survey, the system creates audit records based on the official inventory; these are located on the server. When the mobile user syncs, they actually download to the mobile device the audit records and then enter their changes in these records. When the auditor completes the survey, the auditor uploads the survey data from the device to the audit tables on the server. The facility manager can then review the audit tables and explicitly update the official inventory records.
To the Web Central user managing the survey, the audit records are labeled "Asset & Equipment Survey Items." On the mobile device, the audit records are labeled "Equipment Items." The table name is eq_audit.
Tracking missing items
There are two ways to track items that are listed as audit items but which the auditor does not find in the field.
- Make sure that the Marked for Deletion? field is visible on the auditor's mobile device. When the auditor finds that an audit item does not exist in the field, they can check the Marked for Deletion? field. When the data is uploaded, the manager will know that this item is missing. When the manager closes the survey, the system will delete this record from the inventory table.
- Some sites have a process in which they never delete old Equipment records so that they maintain a complete history for financial tracking and maintenance. In this case, the manager would not display Marked for Deletion? field on the auditor's device. Instead, when the auditor encounters an audit record for an item that does not exist in the field, they would set the Equipment Status field to Missing, Salvaged, or Sold, depending on their knowledge of what happened to the item. In this case, he database retains the inventory record, but the manager knows that the item is no longer exists in the field.