Moselle is a software company specializing in operations, supply chain, and inventory planning solutions for product-based and e-commerce businesses, and this weekly summary reviews its latest product developments and ecosystem activity. Over the past week, the company continued to advance its AI-driven inventory planning assistant, “Mo,” while broadening integrations and deepening support for complex operations.
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A key focus was on enhancing the Mo platform’s usability and automation. Moselle introduced the ability for users to query the AI assistant and directly export responses, cutting down on manual copying and reformatting. Inline editing for production schedules now supports automatic recalculations as buy quantities change, which is intended to streamline planning workflows and reduce errors. These updates are accompanied by general performance improvements that aim to make the system more responsive in daily operations.
The company also expanded Mo’s capabilities for handling complex product structures. New functionality allows the platform to interpret detailed Bill of Materials (BOM) hierarchies, multi-component and bundled products, and child SKU relationships. Users can query material requirements for specific production runs while accounting for dependencies, improving clarity on what components are needed and when. In parallel, Moselle improved visibility into on-order inventory via open purchase orders and more granular location-level breakdowns, with suggested allocation moves to balance stock across warehouses and channels.
Operational tooling received notable updates as well. Moselle introduced automated processing of Whole Foods sales data to replace manual Excel uploads, bulk actions to resolve multiple product issues at once, and enhanced purchase order tools that surface true landed costs before commitments. The company further extended its integration ecosystem with new connections to Order Desk and Amazon Australia, building on a broader network of more than 75 tools across e-commerce, operations, shipping, and accounting. These integrations are positioned to support omnichannel and international merchants by centralizing operational data and enabling more dynamic, demand-driven inventory planning.
On the ecosystem and community side, Moselle highlighted its participation in the “Ugly Talk” event at Shopify’s New York location, focused on 2025 lessons, 2026 priorities, and practical AI applications in e-commerce operations, with interest in bringing the concept to Toronto. From a financial and strategic perspective, the week’s developments point to steady, product-led progress, with improvements aimed at reducing manual work, enhancing cost visibility, and strengthening the platform’s role as a central operational hub. While no financial or customer metrics were disclosed, the continued enhancement of AI features, BOM intelligence, and integrations suggests incremental reinforcement of Moselle’s competitive position and potential for durable customer retention and growth. Overall, the week reflected solid momentum in both product capability and market engagement for Moselle.

