
It will show you a purchases summary that is analogous to the sales view with a list of all of your purchases including prices. I typically do not spend a lot of time in my expenses view.

You can also use any of the column to sort the views, and this functionality will be the same across all the ledger views. I use both the last 30 days and the last 7 days to look at my markets, and I will typically filter by group in the resale summary to quickly look at my material groups. Common optionsīoth views have the same set of filtering options. Items will only show up here if you have both revenue and expense records for the item in question. This is great for figuring out how well you are doing with material flipping. This will give you an overview of all items that you have both purchased and sold in the chosen time frame. The other interesting view here is the resale view. I am especially interested in the most valuable items I sell to make sure that I restock them regularly. I use this a lot in my gold cap challenge to see what items sell. You can also look at just your last 7 days for instance. You can use various filter as well as sorting by name, stack size, auctions and item price. Sales will give you a list of all your sales that have been tracked by TSM. Under Revenue you have three views, where two of them are incredibly useful: Sales and Resale. I suggest sticking to dbmarket to value your stock in most cases.Īs an example you can see that I have about 730k worth of BfA materials when I filter out just my raw materials group. This can be used to quickly get an overview of the total value you have in certain groups as well as the most valuable parts of your inventory. You can filter items by using keyword searches or by choosing one of your groups, it will then filter out anything not in the sub groups. The main option you can choose is what price string or value source you want to use to determine the value of your items.īy default it will use dbmarket as the value and the items will be sorted alphabetically. The Inventory View is fairly self explanatory. You can navigate between the various Ledger views by using the menu on the left. You open it by typing /tsm as usual, and you can find the ledger as one of the main menu choices.īy default you will be shown to the inventory view when you open the Ledger. The ledger is found in the main TSM window. This makes it an invaluable tool in terms of figuring out what markets work, and which do not. It also contains an inventory viewer that contains data on all the items you have across all your characters and guilds. This includes all of the auctions you have sold as well as all auctions you have purchased. The ledger contains all the historical data on your transactions that TSM has logged on your trading activities. I don’t think the last day is interesting, as it is a time frame that is just too small. Especially the daily averages are nice to compare to see how you are doing. Are you doing better or worse than your longer run average. Comparing your last month to your last week is a great way to get a quick indicator on your current direction. The Sales summary will give you a great overview of how you are doing, especially on a week to week basis. You can choose a time frame to only show your performance over a smaller time period.

It will show you a graph of your total gold as well as a summary of your expenses, sales and profits. The dashboard is where you end up if you type /tsm in chat. I will show you how you can use these views to analyze your performance. These are by far the most important parts of TSM and we will continue to dive into the intricacies of operations later.įor now we will head to another part of TSM, the dashboard and the ledger. So far I have covered the the basics in terms of setting up groups and operations as well as what you need to know to effectively run auctioning and shopping scans.
