Accurate weighing is one of the most important steps in compound and sample management. While weighing a sample may seem straightforward, the reality is often far more complex. Laboratories must manage inventory accuracy, maintain traceability, handle exceptions, and ensure samples move through workflows efficiently - all while minimizing human error.
In smaller organizations, weighing may involve only a handful of samples each day. In larger pharmaceutical companies and CROs, thousands of samples may be processed across multiple teams, locations, and workflows. As operations scale, manual processes become increasingly difficult to manage consistently.
This is where sample management software plays a critical role. By connecting weighing workflows to inventory records, automation systems, and laboratory operations, organizations can improve accuracy, maintain compliance, and streamline sample handling from end to end.
Even a seemingly simple request to weigh out 3 mg of a sample can raise multiple questions:
When exceptions occur, laboratories need clear, repeatable processes that maintain data integrity while allowing operators to work efficiently. Without standardized workflows, small inconsistencies can quickly affect inventory accuracy, sample traceability, and downstream research activities.
In practice, weighing exactly 3.00 mg is rarely possible. Laboratories must define acceptable tolerances that ensure enough material is provided without unnecessarily consuming valuable samples.
When performed manually, these calculations can be time-consuming and error-prone. Operators must consider the requirements of downstream processes, sample availability, and inventory status.
Sample management software can automatically calculate acceptable ranges, record actual transferred amounts, update inventory records, and eliminate the need for manual data entry.
The appropriate destination container often depends on what will happen to the sample next.
For example, a sample may be:
Each scenario may require different vial types, storage formats, rack configurations, or labeling requirements.
A structured weighing workflow helps ensure the correct containers and labels are used consistently while reducing the risk of manual errors.
Inventory accuracy is one of the biggest challenges associated with laboratory weighing.
Manual data entry remains a significant source of errors. Even in highly controlled environments, discrepancies can occur due to transcription mistakes, material loss during handling, or inaccurate assumptions about remaining quantities.
Integrating analytical balances directly with sample management software helps address these challenges by automatically capturing weighed amounts and updating inventory records in real time.
Organizations can further improve accuracy by implementing periodic check-weighing procedures. These checks help account for small losses that naturally occur during repeated dispensing activities and ensure inventory records remain aligned with physical stock.
Laboratory operations do not always go according to plan. Operators may discover damaged containers, broken vials, or unreadable barcodes when preparing samples for weighing.
Replacing a container introduces a new identifier, but laboratories must still preserve the complete history associated with the original sample.
Without dedicated software support, transferring information manually can be both time-consuming and error prone.
Sample management systems should allow operators to replace containers while maintaining sample lineage, inventory history, workflow status, and audit records.
Not all samples behave like free-flowing powders.
Some materials may be sticky, viscous, hygroscopic, or gum-like, making accurate transfer difficult. In these situations, traditional weighing workflows may no longer be appropriate.
Laboratories often need alternative processes such as a dissolve-transfer-lyophilize workflow before the required quantity can be delivered.
Managing these transitions creates additional challenges. Samples must remain traceable as they move between instruments, workflows, and operators, while calculations and inventory updates must remain accurate throughout the process.
Integrated sample management platforms help maintain continuity by connecting weighing operations with liquid handlers, automated stores, and other laboratory systems.
A single sample may have multiple active requests from different scientists or projects.
Laboratories must decide whether to:
Each approach has operational implications and requires inventory records to accurately reflect the sample's status and location.
Effective sample management software provides visibility into outstanding requests while ensuring every action remains fully traceable.
Although standardized workflows are essential, laboratories occasionally need to perform activities outside established processes.
Examples may include creating stock solutions, transferring material between storage formats, or preparing samples for automation systems.
A flexible sample management platform should support these exceptions while maintaining complete traceability and inventory control.
One of the most common challenges occurs when there is not enough material available to fulfill a request.
In these situations, laboratories may need to:
Each outcome should be recorded consistently to maintain accurate inventory records and ensure complete visibility into the decision-making process.
Not every operator should have the authority to override workflow rules.
For example, dispensing below a predefined minimum quantity may require supervisor approval. Similarly, inventory adjustments, exception handling, and process deviations may need additional authorization.
Role-based permissions help laboratories balance operational flexibility with process control, ensuring critical decisions are made by appropriately authorized personnel.
Weighing does not happen in isolation.
Laboratories rely on interconnected systems that include analytical balances, automated stores, liquid handlers, LIMS platforms, inventory management systems, and reporting tools.
When these systems operate independently, teams often resort to spreadsheets, manual data transfers, and disconnected workflows.
Integrated sample management software creates a unified operational environment where data moves automatically between systems, reducing errors and improving efficiency.
Traceability is increasingly important in regulated and quality-focused environments.
Every inventory adjustment, weighing activity, exception, and approval should be recorded automatically. Manual processes make it difficult to reconstruct events during audits and investigations.
By maintaining a complete audit trail, laboratories can demonstrate compliance, improve accountability, and strengthen confidence in their data.
The weighing process involves far more than transferring material from one container to another. Laboratories must manage inventory accuracy, workflow exceptions, user permissions, compliance requirements, and integration with a growing ecosystem of laboratory technologies.
As sample volumes increase, these challenges become increasingly difficult to manage through manual processes alone.
Sample management software helps laboratories standardize weighing workflows, automate calculations, maintain accurate inventory records, and provide complete traceability throughout the sample lifecycle.
By connecting weighing operations with inventory management, automation systems, and laboratory workflows, organizations can improve efficiency, reduce errors, and ensure their sample data remains reliable from start to finish.
Weighing is only one step in the sample lifecycle, but inaccuracies at this stage can affect inventory records, downstream workflows, and data integrity across the laboratory.
Cenevo’s Mosaic helps organizations standardize weighing processes, automate inventory updates, maintain complete traceability, and integrate seamlessly with balances, liquid handlers, automated stores, and laboratory information systems.
Want to see how Mosaic can simplify your sample management operations?
Explore Mosaic or speak with our team to learn how leading pharmaceutical, biotech,
and CRO organizations are improving efficiency and inventory accuracy at scale.
Originally published on www.titian.co.uk