Katana and Cin7 are two of the more frequently evaluated platforms for product companies that need to manage inventory alongside some level of production. They are often compared side by side, but they solve different problems. Katana is built for manufacturers who need production planning, bill of materials management, and shop floor visibility. Cin7 is built for product sellers who move inventory across multiple channels, with manufacturing as a secondary consideration.

Choosing the wrong one creates real operational problems. Manufacturers who need MRP and production scheduling often find Cin7 underpowered. Brands that primarily sell finished goods across wholesale and DTC channels often find Katana's channel management capabilities limited. This guide breaks down where each platform excels, where it falls short, and which type of operation each is actually suited for.

A Third Option Worth Evaluating: DOSS Operations Cloud

Before comparing Katana and Cin7, it is worth naming a third platform that comes up in this evaluation for CPG brands specifically: DOSS Operations Cloud .

DOSS is built specifically for consumer goods companies that need tight coordination across inventory management , order management , and procurement in a single platform. It is designed for CPG brands managing physical goods across suppliers, co-manufacturers, 3PLs, and multiple sales channels, where the operational complexity lives in purchase orders, inbound receipts, demand planning, and fulfillment rather than on a shop floor. DOSS gives teams real-time visibility into contribution margin by SKU, channel identifier mapping for EDI and retail partners, lot tracking, and supplier lead time management, all in a system built for the consumer goods model rather than adapted from a general-purpose tool. For brands that work with co-manufacturers and need operational clarity across the full supply chain, DOSS is worth including in the evaluation.

The rest of this comparison focuses on Katana and Cin7 directly.

What Katana Does Well

Katana MRP is designed around manufacturing. Its core strength is production planning: you define bills of materials, set reorder rules for raw materials, create production orders, and track work in progress across the shop floor. Katana's real-time master planner gives manufacturers a live view of what can be produced based on available materials, which is the kind of visibility that most inventory tools simply do not provide.

Key Katana strengths include:

  • Bill of materials management — Multi-level BOM support with variant handling, making it practical for manufacturers with complex product configurations
  • Production order tracking — Shop floor operators can update production progress in real time, giving planners accurate WIP visibility
  • Raw material inventory tracking — Materials are consumed against production orders automatically, keeping stock levels accurate without manual adjustment
  • Make-to-order and make-to-stock support — Katana handles both production models, which matters for brands that fulfill both custom and standard orders
  • Shopify and WooCommerce integrations — Direct sync with D2C storefronts, useful for manufacturers selling directly alongside wholesale

Katana is strongest for small to mid-sized manufacturers that run their own production and need a system their shop floor team can actually use. It is particularly common among food, beverage, and light manufacturing companies in the $1M to $20M revenue range.

What Cin7 Does Well

Cin7 (now available as Cin7 Core and Cin7 Omni) is built around multi-channel inventory management. Its core strength is channel breadth: it connects inventory across B2B wholesale, D2C, Amazon, EDI retail partners, and 3PLs in a way that few platforms match at its price point.

Key Cin7 strengths include:

  • EDI integration — Native EDI support for retail trading partners, which is essential for brands selling into grocery and mass retail channels
  • 3PL and warehouse management — Built-in WMS functionality and connections to third-party logistics providers
  • B2B ordering portal — A self-service portal for wholesale customers to place and manage their own orders
  • Multi-location inventory — Strong support for brands managing inventory across multiple warehouses, 3PLs, and distribution points
  • Extensive integrations — Connects to Shopify, WooCommerce, Amazon, Xero, QuickBooks, and a wide range of logistics platforms

Cin7 does include basic manufacturing features (assembly orders, simple BOMs), but these are designed for light assembly and kitting rather than true production planning. Brands with complex manufacturing requirements consistently find Cin7's production tools inadequate compared to a dedicated MRP system.

Where Each Platform Falls Short

Katana's limitations show up most clearly on the sales and distribution side. Channel management is not Katana's focus. Brands selling across wholesale, retail EDI, and DTC often outgrow Katana's order management capabilities and end up pairing it with a separate system. Reporting and analytics are also limited compared to more mature platforms, and the platform is generally better suited to smaller operations than to brands approaching $50M in revenue.

Cin7's limitations are most visible for manufacturers who need real production control. Assembly orders work for simple kitting but do not replace MRP-style production planning. Shop floor tracking, work in progress visibility, and raw material consumption against production orders are not strengths. Brands that manufacture their own products and evaluate Cin7 as an all-in-one solution frequently find themselves managing production in spreadsheets alongside the platform.

Pricing

Both platforms charge based on features and usage volume, and both have moved toward opaque pricing that requires a sales conversation for accurate quotes.

Katana's published pricing starts at approximately $99 per month for its Standard plan and scales to $299 and above for Advanced and Professional tiers. Additional costs apply for extra users and higher order volumes.

Cin7's pricing starts at approximately $349 per month for Core and increases significantly for Omni, which adds EDI and 3PL functionality. For brands that need EDI capabilities, Cin7 Omni is generally required, pushing the entry cost considerably higher.

Neither platform is inexpensive once you account for implementation, integrations, and the user seats your team actually needs.

Which Is Right for Your Operation

Choose Katana if:

  • You manufacture your own products and need real production planning
  • Your team works on a shop floor and needs live WIP visibility
  • Your primary sales channels are D2C (Shopify/WooCommerce) and some wholesale
  • You are a smaller manufacturer (under $20M) looking for an accessible MRP

Choose Cin7 if:

  • You sell finished goods across multiple channels including EDI retail
  • You work with 3PLs and need strong warehouse and logistics integration
  • Your manufacturing needs are limited to light assembly or kitting
  • Channel operations complexity is higher than production complexity

Consider DOSS Operations Cloud if:

  • You are a CPG brand that is growing quickly
  • Your operational complexity is in procurement, inbound logistics, and multi-channel order management rather than shop floor production
  • You need tight integration between purchase orders, inventory, and sales orders with real-time contribution margin visibility
  • You want a platform built specifically for consumer goods companies rather than a general-purpose inventory tool

Making the Decision

Katana and Cin7 represent two distinct philosophies: production-first versus channel-first. The right choice depends on where your operational complexity actually lives. A food manufacturer running its own production line has different needs than a CPG brand selling across 15 retail accounts and three 3PLs.

The most common mistake in this evaluation is choosing based on feature lists rather than operational fit. Katana's manufacturing depth is only valuable if you have a shop floor to manage. Cin7's channel breadth is only valuable if you have the channel complexity to justify it.

DOSS Operations Cloud connects inventory management , order management , and procurement in a single platform designed specifically for consumer goods companies. It integrates with QuickBooks and Xero rather than replacing them. For CPG brands that need operational visibility across the supply chain, it is worth a direct comparison alongside Katana and Cin7.

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