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For the Waterdeep Trading Company, order quantity is not a clerical detail. It is a product strategy choice that shapes cash, risk, and service.

MOQ and EOQ only make sense when viewed through the lens of what a product is meant to do for the business. Some goods are built for volume. Others exist to deliver value, margin, or capability. When teams align product strategy with ordering behavior, decisions become more precise, and silent balance-sheet damage is avoided.

This article integrates the product strategy view, the MOQ-EOQ trade-off, and a worked example that makes the trade-off visible.

Two Product Strategies, Two Ordering Behaviors

Most products fall into one of two broad strategies. Bulk flow goods are designed to move. Value-sensitive goods are designed to protect margin and cash.

This classification should happen before any discussion of order size.

Bulk Flow Products

Bulk-flow products sell steadily, store cheaply, and rarely lose value over time.

For these goods, MOQ pressure is often acceptable. Excess stock turns quickly, and the business recovers its coin through normal sales.

EOQ still matters, but it often aligns closely with MOQ when holding costs and demand are well-balanced.

This is why buyers feel comfortable ordering by the crate or wagon.

Value Sensitive Products

Value-sensitive products behave very differently.

Demand is uneven. Storage is costly. Risk rises the longer goods sit idle. These products punish excess.

Here, EOQ is usually far lower than the supplier’s MOQ. Every unit above EOQ increases tied-up cash and write-off exposure.

Accepting MOQ without challenge becomes a structural risk, not a short-term inconvenience.

These products are where ordering discipline matters most.

MOQ and EOQ Within Product Strategy

MOQ and EOQ serve different masters.

The supplier sets the MOQ and reflects their cost structure. It is a constraint.

The business sets the EOQ and aligns it with total cost and working capital goals. It is a decision target.

The conflict arises when the MOQ exceeds the EOQ.

This matrix alone often explains why an order feels wrong before numbers are even reviewed.

Worked Example

Consider the case of a specialty alchemical ink, favored by scribes and guild clerks. Annual demand remains modest but consistent, while the supplier insists on large batch distillations. This setup creates a classic tension between what the business wants to order and what the supplier requires.

When MOQ Sits Above EOQ

Consider the case of a specialty alchemical ink, favored by scribes and guild clerks. Annual demand remains modest but consistent, while the supplier insists on large batch distillations. This setup creates a classic tension between what the business wants to order and what the supplier requires.

Scenario Setup: The company sells a specialty alchemical ink used by scribes and guild clerks.  Annual demand is low but steady. The supplier only runs large batch distillations.

The following table summarizes the key assumptions for this scenario: annual demand is 50 vials, the supplier’s minimum order quantity (MOQ) is 500 vials, and the business’s calculated economic order quantity (EOQ) is 60 vials. Each vial costs 8 FSD, and the annual holding cost rate is 25%. By strategy, this ink is a value-sensitive product, making excess inventory a costly risk.

This is a value-sensitive product by strategy.

EOQ View: What the business would choose

If the business could order at its preferred EOQ, the numbers reflect a lean approach: 60 vials per order, a purchase value of 480 FSD, and an average inventory of 30 vials. Inventory value stays at 240 FSD, with an annual holding cost of just 60 FSD. Cash exposure is limited, and inventory turns efficiently.

Cash exposure is limited, and inventory turns cleanly.

MOQ View: What the supplier requires

When the supplier’s MOQ dictates the order size, the impact is dramatic. The business must purchase 500 vials at once, tying up 4,000 FSD. Average inventory jumps to 250 vials, with a value of 2,000 FSD, and annual holding costs soar to 500 FSD. This approach locks up far more cash and increases the risk of unsold stock.

What Changed

Demand did not change. Unit cost did not change. Only the order quantity changed.

Cash tied up increased by 3,520.00 FSD. Annual holding cost increased by 440.00 FSD.

That difference lives entirely on the buyer’s balance sheet.

Making the Trade Off Visible: Buyer and Planner Checklist

Before placing an order that exceeds EOQ, teams should pause and answer the following.

Multiple No answers indicate that the order carries structural risk.

When This Becomes a Leadership Issue

High MOQ on value-sensitive products should never be handled quietly.

These cases belong in sales and operations planning or integrated planning discussions, where demand, supplier strategy, and cash are reviewed together.

Negotiating With Strategy in Mind

Suppliers often defend MOQs on the grounds of unit price. That view ignores total cost.

Better discussions focus on shared value. Stable commitments, longer contracts, coordinated transport, or phased deliveries can lower MOQ pressure without harming supplier economics.

Strategy provides the leverage. Quantity follows.

Other Ordering Strategies to Consider Beyond MOQ and EOQ

MOQ and EOQ frame the core tension between supplier constraints and internal cost control. The company also uses additional ordering strategies to fit product behavior, demand visibility, and risk tolerance. These approaches complement MOQ and EOQ rather than replace them.

These strategies let planners express product intent clearly. A healing potion may use min-max replenishment to protect service, while festival banners use project-based ordering to avoid leftovers.

Final Thoughts

Order quantity is not neutral. It reflects how a product creates value.

Bulk flow goods reward scale. Value-sensitive goods punish excess. MOQ is a constraint imposed from outside. EOQ is a choice made within the business.

When teams connect product strategy to ordering behavior, trade-offs become visible, intentional, and easier to lead.


Support the AD&D365 Project on Patreon.  To grow this world, we’ve launched an official Patreon page where supporters can access exclusive content, tools, and training labs, and even influence the project’s future. Your support fuels more than just development; it expands the guildhall, forges new scrolls, and empowers the next generation of configuration wizards.  Begin your journey: https://www.patreon.com/adnd365/

A Grateful Salute to Our Patrons.  To all those who stand behind the vision, thank you for helping bring this world to life. Our Benefactors, Andre Breillatt and Eryndor Fiscairn, your boundless generosity fuels the arcane core of this project. Without your magic, the weave would falter. Our Apprentices, the spell engines turn, and the training labs thrive thanks to our current Apprentices: Michael Ramirez and Andreth Bael’Rathyn. Special thanks to our past Apprentices, whose contributions helped us get here: Ralf Weber, Wendy Rijners, Shashi Mahesh, Julia Tejera, Ben Ekokobe, Tiago Xavier, Naveen Boyinapelli, Marcos Tadeu Wolf, Kathryn Greene, Jason Brown, Mark Christy, and Ashish Singh. Our Initiates, Jesper Livbjerg, Peter Lorre, Gregory Brigden, and Martin Grahm, your commitment marks the start of the deeper path, stepping beyond mere observation into the active shaping of this realm. Our Followers, your steady presence along the journey is a beacon of encouragement: Rusty Cavalier, Eric Shuss, Sunil Panchal, Sarah D. Morgan, Nick Ramchandani, Daniel Kjærsgaard, and Tomasz Pałys. And our Voyeurs, Harry Burgh, Abdelrahman Nabil, and Basil Quarrell, ever watching from the shadows, clearly intrigued… but not enough to part with a single gold piece. Your silent curiosity is noted and mildly judged.

Want to design your own economic models in Faerûn?  Get your own AD&D365 Environment and guides at adnd365.com/start, and request access to the public view of the current database at https://public.adnd365.com – Login npc@adnd365.com, Password N0nPl@yC#822!

In Faerûn, ownership of an idea, design, or spell is as valuable as a chest of gemstones. The Waterdeep Trading Company, like many guilds and merchant houses, often deals with works of the mind, arcane formulae, crafted inventions, and branded products whose rights belong to inventors, enchanters, or scribes. Royalty tracking ensures that those creators receive fair compensation for the ongoing use or sale of their intellectual property.

What It Is

Royalty tracking refers to the financial process of calculating, recording, and paying royalties to the rightful owners of intellectual property (IP). This includes licensing fees for designs, inventions, or enchanted patterns, and shares of revenue for bards, artificers, or scholars whose work continues to generate value long after its creation. Within the Waterdeep Trading Company, royalties may arise from magical patents, exclusive trade routes, branded goods, or licensed production rights.

Why It Matters

Accurate royalty management protects both creators and merchants. For the company, it ensures compliance with guild laws and contractual terms. For inventors and owners, it guarantees steady income from ongoing production or sales. Mismanagement of royalties can lead to guild sanctions, damaged reputation, and disputes in the Merchant Courts of Waterdeep.

Components of Royalty Management

Royalty tracking in Dynamics 365 (and its Faerûnian counterpart) combines the disciplines of finance, contract management, and inventory control. Each component plays a role in ensuring fair distribution of profit.

Worked Example: Enchanted Blade Royalty

Consider a blacksmith in Baldur’s Gate who licensed the design for an “Everbright Longsword” to the Waterdeep Trading Company. The agreement grants him 5 percent of net sales revenue per quarter.

At the end of the quarter, the system posts an accrual entry:

  • Debit: Royalty Expense (Account 6150) – 3,150.00 FSD
  • Credit: Royalty Payable (Account 2170) – 3,150.00 FSD

Once payment is approved, the balance is settled through a vendor payment run to the blacksmith’s guild account.

Realms-Aware Considerations

Royalty management in Faerûn extends beyond simple coins:

  • Magical IP: Spell patterns, enchantments, and sigils often require royalties in kind, such as mana crystals or service credits.
  • Guild Oversight: The Scriveners’, Scribes’, and Clerks’ Guild verifies contracts and ensures proper recordkeeping of intellectual works.
  • Cross-Planar Licensing: When designs are sold in other planes, conversion rates (via the Faerûn Commodities Exchange, FCOMEX) must be applied.
  • Arcane Enforcement: Many contracts are sealed magically, automatically deducting royalties when sales are posted.

Final Thoughts

Royalty tracking ensures fairness and sustainability in a realm where ideas themselves are currency. By integrating royalty agreements within financial ledgers, the Waterdeep Trading Company ensures that every creator, from enchanter to inventor, is rewarded when their craft continues to bring value. Proper setup of royalty contracts and automated payment workflows transforms compliance into a competitive advantage, ensuring trust, transparency, and lasting prosperity across Faerûn’s guilds and markets.


Support the AD&D365 Project on Patreon.  To grow this world, we’ve launched an official Patreon where supporters can gain access to exclusive content, tools, training labs, and even influence the future of the project. Your support fuels more than just development ,  it expands the guildhall, forges new scrolls, and empowers the next generation of configuration wizards.  Begin your journey: https://www.patreon.com/adnd365/

A Grateful Salute to Our Patrons.  To all those who stand behind the vision, thank you for helping bring this world to life. Our Benefactors, Andre Breillatt, and Eryndor Fiscairn, your boundless generosity fuels the arcane core of this project. Without your magic, the weave would falter. Our Apprentices, the spell engines turn and the training labs thrive thanks to our current Apprentices: Michael Ramirez and Andreth Bael’Rathyn. Special thanks to our past Apprentices, whose contributions helped us get here:  Ralf Weber, Wendy Rijners, Shashi Mahesh, Julia Tejera, Ben Ekokobe, Tiago Xavier, Naveen Boyinapelli, Marcos Tadeu Wolf, Kathryn Greene, Jason Brown, Mark Christy, and Ashish Singh. Our Initiates, Gregory Brigden, and Martin Grahm, your commitment marks the start of the deeper path, stepping beyond mere observation into the active shaping of this realm. Our Followers, your steady presence along the journey is a beacon of encouragement:  Eric Shuss, Sunil Panchal, Sarah D. Morgan, Nick Ramchandani, Daniel Kjærsgaard, and Tomasz Pałys. And our Voyeurs, Harry Burgh, Abdelrahman Nabil, and Basil Quarrell, ever watching from the shadows, clearly intrigued… but not enough to part with a single gold piece. Your silent curiosity is noted, and mildly judged.

Want to design your own economic models in Faerûn?  Get your own AD&D365 Environment and guides at adnd365.com/start, and request access to the public view of the current database at https://public.adnd365.com – Login npc@adnd365.com, Password N0nPl@yC#822!

In the thriving trade cities of Waterdeep, Baldur’s Gate, and beyond, merchants often find themselves at a loss not from theft or misadventure but from failing to account for the true cost of their imports. That’s where understanding landed cost comes in.

Whether you’re bringing in saffron from Calimshan, dwarven steel from Mithral Hall, or elven wine from the Salington Vinyards, knowing your full landed cost is the difference between profit and peril.

What Is Landed Cost

Landed cost is the total expense incurred to bring a product from its source to its final destination not just the vendor’s price. It includes:

  • Base purchase cost
  • Transport fees (caravan, barge, airship, or teleportation)
  • Import duties and tariffs
  • Handling, inspection, and insurance
  • Security (escorts, guards, bribes if necessary)
  • Currency exchange losses or fees
  • Magical sealing, warding, or scrying

These additional costs accumulate through every step of the product’s journey and they must be calculated if a merchant is to determine the real price of their inventory.

Sample Landed Cost Breakdown: A Faerûnian Case Study

Let’s say the Waterdeep Trading Company imports Sake Rage from Salington Vinyards in Neverwinter.

A merchant who sells the sake based solely on the 260 FSD supplier price may think they’re earning 20 percent margin. In truth they may barely break even or worse.

Why Landed Cost Matters

  • Proper Pricing Without it prices are based on illusion not reality
  • Trade Route Evaluation Understanding which routes magical or mundane offer better margins
  • Profitability Forecasting A true picture of earnings requires full cost awareness
  • Product Comparison Knowing full cost helps compare multiple suppliers not just their invoice price

Common Faerûnian Costs to Consider

Best Practices for Faerûnian Merchants

  • Track each cost layer no matter how small Even a 5 FSD handling fee can add up across shipments
  • Use standard units like FSD per crate or bottle for consistency
  • Build buffer margins into your pricing to account for lost goods taxes or delays
  • Plan seasonally Snow in the Spine of the World Expect freight delays and added guard fees
  • Maintain supplier scorecards with both base and landed cost to spot hidden costs

Final Thoughts

In the end savvy trade in Faerûn isn’t about knowing the lowest price it’s about understanding the total price. Whether your goods travel by foot hoof keelboat or leyline calculating landed cost is your secret weapon in staying competitive and profitable.

Want to simulate shipping strategies in Faerûn or model transportation operations in Dynamics 365?

Get your own AD&D365 Environment and guides at adnd365.com/start, and request access to the public view of the current database at https://public.adnd365.com

Login npc@adnd365.com Password N0nPl@yC#822!

Support the AD&D365 Project on Patreon

To grow this world, we’ve launched an official Patreon where supporters can gain access to exclusive content, tools, training labs, and even influence the future of the project. Your support fuels more than just development — it expands the guildhall, forges new scrolls, and empowers the next generation of configuration wizards. Begin your journey: https://www.patreon.com/adnd365/

Thanks to my supporters for helping make this content possible:

Our Benefactor, Andre Breillatt, whose generosity powers the arcane core of the project.

Our Apprentices, who keep the spell engines humming and the training labs active: Ralf Weber, Wendy Rijners, Shashi Mahesh, Julia Tejera, Ben Ekokobe, Tiago Xavier, Naveen Boyinapelli, Marcos Tadeu Wolf, Kathryn Greene, Jason Brown, Michael Ramirez, Mark Christy, and Ashish Singh.

Our Followers, who lend their steady support and encouragement along every step of the journey: Sunil Panchal, Sarah D. Morgan, Nick Ramchandani, Daniel Kjærsgaard, and Tomasz Pałys.