Solution guide
Count what is there. Keep the variance reviewable.
Direct answer
How does OneCount help with hospitality inventory and stocktake?
OneCount keeps recorded stock counts against the active venue, location and session, then makes completed session details, catalogue context and variance reviewable on the web. The public site does not claim that count entry starts in the web workspace; confirm the current supported handoff before a live count.
A count has a place and a session
A team counts against a named venue and stocktake session rather than a loose worksheet. Items stay tied to catalogue identity, and recorded quantities can be reviewed before a session is treated as complete.
- Venue and location context
- Item quantities tied to catalogue identity
- Session history
- Recorded variance review
What the review still needs
People still need to count the stock, resolve item identity and decide whether a variance is explained. OneCount records and presents that work; it does not claim that every count is accurate without human checking.
Product ownership
Which OneCount product owns this?
OneCount owns inventory, catalogue, pricing and costing. Ops can later read an approved stock or cost snapshot, but it does not become the owner of the count, valuation or supplier-price record.

OneCount
OneCount owns inventory, catalog, pricing and costing.
Availability and limitations
Know the boundary before the decision.
- Physical quantities and item matches still require human confirmation.
- The web path prepares and reviews count records; the public site does not claim a verified native-store destination for count entry.
Available on web
Start with the record that needs attention.
Review current pricing, then create a OneCount web account when the available path fits your venue.