Check the area around the product.
Posted: Wed Jan 22, 2025 4:09 am
The next step is to organize the information surrounding one "product." Specifically, it is as follows:
nearby-information.png
Although these peripheral information are not "products," they are often managed in PIM as "product-related information." Once the unit of "product" mentioned above has been decided, you can further consider the following points:
Is one product linked to one product category?
Are photos and catalogs linked features of our advertising database to a single product?
Is it by series? Or does it link regardless of category?
Do instructions and software have a price? If so, are they "goods"?
Does the relationship between drawings, firmware, and products change over time?
If you have progressed this far and have a clear understanding , the subsequent processes will be much easier. On the other hand, if the implementation project proceeds with things remaining to this point, there will be many cases where various inconveniences arise when registering the data.
Here, you will find playful information (such as a well-known "drawing" that is related to products in many categories) and lonely information (such as an "image" that has no direct relationship but is somehow connected to the unspecified), and by personifying the information, you may be able to recommend even difficult projects in a fun way!!
Most of the information is common and related to ordinary people, so if you occasionally come across something special and start imagining things like this, it may interfere with your work, so please be careful.
This time, we introduced the process of deciding on a unit for managing in PIM called "product". Once you have a new unit, you can further develop it and make calculations such as "1 set = N components" or "1 product + 1 image + N drawings = 1 web page".
nearby-information.png
Although these peripheral information are not "products," they are often managed in PIM as "product-related information." Once the unit of "product" mentioned above has been decided, you can further consider the following points:
Is one product linked to one product category?
Are photos and catalogs linked features of our advertising database to a single product?
Is it by series? Or does it link regardless of category?
Do instructions and software have a price? If so, are they "goods"?
Does the relationship between drawings, firmware, and products change over time?
If you have progressed this far and have a clear understanding , the subsequent processes will be much easier. On the other hand, if the implementation project proceeds with things remaining to this point, there will be many cases where various inconveniences arise when registering the data.
Here, you will find playful information (such as a well-known "drawing" that is related to products in many categories) and lonely information (such as an "image" that has no direct relationship but is somehow connected to the unspecified), and by personifying the information, you may be able to recommend even difficult projects in a fun way!!
Most of the information is common and related to ordinary people, so if you occasionally come across something special and start imagining things like this, it may interfere with your work, so please be careful.
This time, we introduced the process of deciding on a unit for managing in PIM called "product". Once you have a new unit, you can further develop it and make calculations such as "1 set = N components" or "1 product + 1 image + N drawings = 1 web page".