Providing ongoing service to customers is an important part of any business and one that can be a source of customer satisfaction and loyalty, in addition to revenue. However, managing and tracking service is not always easy, and Microsoft Dynamics NAV provides a set of tools to help. These tools are designed to support repair shop and field service operations, and can be used in business scenarios such as complex customer service distribution systems, industrial service environments with bills of materials, and high volume dispatching of service technicians with requirements for spare parts management.

With these tools you can accomplish the following:

In addition, you can standardize coding, set up contracts, implement a discounting policy, and create route maps for service employees.

In general, there are two aspects to service management: configuring and setting up your system, and using it for pricing, contracts, orders, service personnel dispatch, and job scheduler.

The following table describes a sequence of tasks, with links to the topics that describe them. These tasks are listed in the order in which they are generally performed.

ToSee

Set up Service Management, including fault codes, policies, default documents and templates.

Configure Service Processes

Set up service orders, service tasks, and dispatch systems.

Plan Service

Set up contracts using templates and provide quotes and estimates

Fulfill Service Contracts

Determine solutions, provide loaners, and establish service pricing.

Handle Customer Inquiries

Finalize service details, provide service to customers, and invoice service orders.

Deliver Service

See Also