MARK/READY turns the marker list you already have — typed by hand or dropped as a messy export — into a verified, priced order on the Power/mation shop. Minutes, not an afternoon.
You didn't get into this trade to be a data-entry clerk. But here you are — retyping the same terminal strip you typed last Tuesday, off a paper list, into a form that wasn't built for how you work.
What you see here is what the software actually does — same order, same words.
Type marker text straight onto a replica of the physical strip — Enter, Tab, arrow keys, the way a fast typist already thinks. Or drop the messy export you already have: EPLAN, SolidWorks Electrical, AutoCAD Electrical, or a hand-built Excel sheet. Range shorthand like TB1: 1-24 expands into 24 real markers.
Anything that needs a human decision gets flagged in plain English — not an error code. Amber means judgment call. Red means it will misprint. Nothing goes to print until every flag is resolved or you've explicitly accepted it.
A pixel-accurate twin of the physical marker card — real part number, real layout, real character limits — editable inline. Change the material, the sheet re-flows. Change the quantity, the price updates while you watch.
One approval — not five signatures, not a phone call. The job becomes a ticket and a cart pre-loaded at your real contract pricing on the Power/mation shop. This isn't a new checkout to trust. It's a faster way into the one you already do.
MARK/READY is built for people who check the work. So it shows its work.
Demo jobs are visibly marked and never pretend to be a real order. What you see in the demo is what ships — nothing staged.
Column mapping is confident where it can be, flagged for a human glance where it can't. Every questionable marker gets looked at before anything prints.
When AI mapping isn't available, deterministic rules take over — same result path, and an honest caption says which one did the work.
What lands on your desk is a finished job: order total, contract pricing already applied, a job ticket with a timestamp and an audit trail. The back-and-forth about what the shop actually meant? That category of email goes away.
The exports you already produce — EPLAN, SolidWorks Electrical, AutoCAD Electrical — go in as-is. Columns map to fields with the mapping shown, not hidden. Every marker traces back to the row it came from.
Type it. Or drop it. Either way — ready.