Walk onto any active construction site in India and you'll find one of two problems. Either there's a stack of 50-kg cement bags sitting in the open, slowly absorbing moisture because the order was placed before the actual need was calculated. Or work stopped this morning because the sand ran out, the supplier is two hours away, and nobody noticed the stock had dropped to zero.
Both situations cost money. The first locks up working capital in idle inventory and risks material spoilage. The second creates a cascade — delayed work, idle labour wages, and a project timeline that slips. Neither is inevitable, and both are caused by the same underlying problem: there is no single, reliable picture of what is on site, what has been consumed, and what needs to be ordered next.
Why Guesswork Is the Default
Most contractors order materials based on one of three things: a rough mental estimate, the supervisor's WhatsApp message ("cement khatam ho raha hai, order karo"), or a purchase history from the last similar job. None of these is reliable.
Mental estimates drift from reality the moment the site gets busy. The supervisor's message is already several days behind — by the time it reaches you and a delivery is arranged, work may have already stopped. And copying purchase quantities from a previous project ignores differences in scope, layout, and specification.
The root cause is that material data is scattered: one person records deliveries, another person tracks consumption, no one reconciles the two, and the actual remaining stock is never calculated in real time. Fixing this doesn't require complicated software or new processes — it requires tracking three numbers consistently.
The Three Numbers Every Site Needs
For any material on any site, you need to know three things at any point in time:
Material Stock Formula
That's it. If you know these three numbers for each material, you know exactly what's left, when to reorder, and whether your current stock matches your expected consumption for the next phase of work. Everything else is built on top of this.
The wastage number matters too: Across Indian construction sites, typical material wastage runs at 3–5% for steel and 5–8% for cement. If your consumption is tracking significantly higher than expected, it's a sign of poor mixing ratios, theft, or rework — all of which show up as unexplained material disappearing from your stock register before it reaches the structure.
Why Manual Tracking Always Breaks Down
Most contractors maintain some version of a site register — a notebook or Excel sheet where deliveries and consumption are recorded. In theory, this works. In practice, it fails for four consistent reasons:
Deliveries get recorded; consumption often doesn't
Writing down a supplier delivery is easy — there's a physical bill. Recording how many bags went into today's column or how many cubic feet of sand were used in the footing requires discipline that erodes on busy days. The register drifts from reality within two weeks.
The register is at the site; the decision-maker is not
When you need to decide whether to place a new order, you're likely not standing at the site register. You're making that call from another site, from your car, or from home. A paper register gives you no visibility unless someone reads it to you over the phone.
Multi-site comparison is impossible
If you're running three sites, each has its own register. Seeing total spend across materials, or comparing consumption rates between projects, requires manually consolidating three separate records — work that almost never gets done.
Supplier reconciliation is done at the end, not in real time
Supplier bills are checked against site records at the end of the month — by which point any discrepancies in delivered quantities are hard to prove and harder to dispute. Real-time recording catches the difference on the day it happens.
A Practical System That Actually Works
You don't need to change how your site operates. You need to change where the data lives — from a paper register or a laptop in the office to a phone-accessible system that your supervisor can update from the site in under a minute.
Here's a simple process that works for Indian construction sites of any size:
Record every delivery when it arrives — quantity, supplier, and site
Before the supplier truck leaves the site, the delivery goes into the system. Material name, quantity delivered, supplier name, and site. This takes 45 seconds and creates a digital record that matches the physical bill.
Log consumption at the end of each work day
The supervisor records how much of each material was used that day — how many cement bags went into mixing, how many steel rods were cut and placed. End-of-day takes two minutes and keeps the running balance accurate.
Set a reorder level for each material
Work out how many days of material you need on site at minimum — based on your supplier's lead time plus a safety buffer. Set a reorder level equal to that number of days' consumption. When remaining stock drops to that level, it's time to order — not when the stock hits zero.
Review material spend per site each week
A five-minute weekly review — total materials purchased, total consumed, remaining stock, and total spend — keeps you on top of trends. If a site is consuming cement 20% faster than planned, you catch it in week two, not at the project close-out.
Material-Specific Tips for Indian Construction
Each major material has its own ordering and storage quirks. Here's what matters most for the three materials that account for the bulk of construction spend:
Cement
Cement has a shelf life. In Indian humidity, bagged cement that's been on site for more than 3 months — especially if stored incorrectly — begins to absorb moisture and lose compressive strength. Over-ordering is a direct financial loss, not just a cash-flow problem.
- → Never store more than 45 days of working stock on site
- → Track which bags arrived first (FIFO) — older bags must be used before newer ones
- → Match order quantity to the specific upcoming work — slab, columns, or plastering have very different cement requirements
Steel (TMT Bars)
Steel is ordered by weight but used by length. Ordering errors often happen when the conversion from drawing quantities (in kg) to supplier invoices (in pieces × length) is done manually. Cutting waste adds another variable — typically 3–5%.
- → Record deliveries by weight in kg; track consumption by structural element (columns, beams, slab)
- → Account for 3–5% cutting wastage in your order quantity
- → Steel can be stored longer than cement, so a slightly larger buffer stock is acceptable for steel
Sand and Aggregates
Sand and coarse aggregate are typically ordered in loads (lorry or tractor loads). The challenge is that load sizes vary by supplier and vehicle, and volume measurements at the site are approximate. Supplier overbilling is common for bulk materials.
- → Agree on a standard load measurement with each supplier before the project starts
- → Record deliveries by volume (cubic feet or cubic metres) rather than number of loads
- → Log consumption by pour — foundation concrete, column shuttering fill, plastering sand — to keep totals accurate
"I used to order cement based on what felt right. After I started tracking actual consumption in the app, I realised I was over-ordering by about 15 bags per slab. That's ₹7,000–8,000 sitting idle on every pour."
How SiteSmartly Handles Material Tracking
SiteSmartly's material module is built around the three-number system described above. For every material on every site, you have a live view of what was purchased, what was consumed, and what's remaining — updated from the field as it happens.
Record purchases from your phone in under a minute
When a delivery arrives, the supervisor selects the material, enters the quantity, and picks the supplier. The running stock updates instantly. No paper bill chase at month-end.
Log daily consumption from the site
Consumption entries are recorded against the site and material — the remaining balance is calculated automatically. No formula maintenance, no version conflicts.
See all sites in one dashboard
Multi-site material overview lets you compare spend and consumption across projects. If one site is burning through sand faster than another, you'll see it — before you get a surprise invoice.
Supplier credit and deferred payment tracking built in
When you purchase materials on credit, SiteSmartly records the outstanding amount against that supplier. Settlement is tracked separately. At any point you know exactly what you owe, to whom, and when it's due.
Track materials from your phone — not a spreadsheet
SiteSmartly tracks purchases, consumption, and remaining stock per site — with supplier dues built in. Free to start, no credit card required.
Try SiteSmartly FreeSummary
Over-ordering and under-ordering are both symptoms of the same problem: no reliable, real-time view of material stock. The fix is simple — track three numbers for every material: opening stock, total purchased, and total consumed. What remains is your current stock.
The key is making this data available on the phone of whoever is at the site, updated in real time, and visible to you from wherever you are. When that's in place, reorder decisions stop being guesswork and start being straightforward. Work doesn't stop because sand ran out. Cash doesn't get locked up in excess cement bags. And your project stays on track.