Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Docket is a vertical SaaS product built for luxury watch dealers. Its core goal is to replace spreadsheets with a single system for tracking luxury watch inventory, capital, and sales. The site emphasizes “no spreadsheets, no chaos, just facts,” and its information architecture is organized around Dashboard, Inventory, Sales, Capital, and Help. Overall, it feels like an operating ledger purpose-built for watch traders.
The dashboard is the center of Docket, showing starting capital, capital tied up in inventory, available liquidity, capital utilization, revenue, profit, average margin, and number of items sold. The inventory module records each watch’s brand, model, reference number, serial number, purchase price, days in stock, and status, with support for photo hosting and search. The sales module covers statuses such as reserved, pending, completed, refunded, and cancelled, and can track buyers, deposits, costs, and commissions while automatically calculating margin and ROI. The capital module lets users manage personal funds separately from investor funds, and view each investor’s balance, cumulative inflows/outflows, and full transaction history.
The public page only mentions a “20-day free trial” and states that no charge is made before the trial ends. It does not show formal plans, monthly or annual pricing, user limits, payment methods, refund policy, or related details. Buyers will still need to confirm the long-term cost before or after entering the trial.
The main advantage is its tight focus on a specific use case. The fields are highly aligned with watch trading workflows: serial number, reference number, purchase price, photos, days in stock, commissions, and investor capital are all frequent requirements in this industry. Its automatic summaries of profit and capital tied up in inventory can also help reduce spreadsheet errors. The downside is the lack of key enterprise software information: there is no visible explanation of team permissions, third-party integrations, API, data security and compliance, backup/export options, or multi-store support. It is also unclear whether Docket supports multi-currency, tax handling, or accounting system integrations.
Docket is better suited to individual watch dealers, small trading teams, and businesses that need to manage inventory, sales profit, and investor capital at the same time. It is less suitable for companies that already require a full ERP, financial integrations, or complex approval permissions. Its accessibility from China cannot be determined from the public page, and payment methods are not disclosed. If access or payment is limited, alternatives could be built using Feishu Base, Jiandaoyun, DingTalk Yida, or tools such as Airtable, Odoo, and Zoho Inventory.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on docket.team official site.
docket.team is an United Kingdom SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach docket.team directly.