Asset management breaks down not because organizations lack signals, but because those signals often do not move through a governed process that makes them trustworthy, auditable, or operationally useful.
RFID readers, GPS trackers, mobile inspection apps, and IoT sensors are more accessible than they have ever been. Most asset-intensive organizations have deployed at least one. The data exists. The gap is what happens after the data is collected.
Exceptions get flagged but not resolved. Discrepancies between the field and the ledger get identified but never make it through a workflow that produces a trusted, audit-ready result. The fixed asset subledger drifts further from physical reality with every cycle.
Kroll Advisory, which publishes annual research drawing on thousands of fixed asset engagements across dozens of countries, reports that 10 to 30 percent of the average corporate fixed asset register consists of ghost assets. The organizations in those engagements are not short on technology. They are short on the layer that connects evidence to action.
That layer is orchestration. For most asset management programs, it is the piece that is rarely implemented end-to-end.
Asset management orchestration is the governed control layer that routes asset evidence through defined review, approval, and remediation steps before synchronizing verified results with financial systems of record.
Orchestration is not a single tool. It is a control layer implemented through workflow, integration, and governance design. It determines who sees the evidence after an exception is found, in what sequence, under what rules, with what escalation path, and with what audit trail. Generic workflow tools (BPM platforms, ServiceNow, Power Automate) can automate routing, but they lack three things the asset context requires: an evidence model that connects physical proof to asset records, audit-grade linkage to the fixed asset subledger, and the human-in-the-loop governance structure that financial compliance demands. Orchestration built for asset management is different from orchestration built for general process automation.
When a sensor detects a location change, an inspection finds a replaced component, or a document reveals a discrepancy between a bill of materials and the fixed asset register, something has to happen next. The right person is notified. The evidence is reviewed. A decision is made. Remediation is triggered. The verified result is written back to the ERP. Orchestration governs all of those steps. Without it, they happen inconsistently through email threads and spreadsheets, or often do not happen at all.
Most asset management programs invest heavily in the capture layer and rarely implement orchestration end-to-end. Four patterns explain why.
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Episodic Audit |
Orchestrated Verification |
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Exception detection |
Annual, point-in-time |
Continuous, at time of change |
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Evidence quality |
Reconstructed after the fact |
Captured and preserved in real time |
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Human review |
Ad hoc, undocumented |
Defined decision points, formally recorded |
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ERP synchronization |
Manual rekeying |
Automatic on approval |
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Audit readiness |
Sprint before each cycle |
Continuous |
When asset evidence is captured but not governed, costs accumulate across several categories.
"Asset management breaks down not because organizations lack signals. It breaks down because those signals rarely move through a governed chain of action that makes them trustworthy, auditable, and operationally useful. Visibility is not control."
- Tim Harris, CEO, SoloTruth
The orchestration gap affects any organization with significant physical assets and active operational change.
Not all approaches to asset management deliver a governed evidence-to-ERP workflow. When evaluating options, look for six capabilities:
Reality: Tracking tools improve capture. They do not govern what happens after an exception is found. A faster stream of unresolved exceptions is not an improvement. The reconciliation problem is a workflow problem, not a data problem.
Reality: Manual exception resolution works until volume, velocity, or audit scrutiny increases. It also produces incomplete audit trails, because decisions made through email and verbal handoffs are not formally documented. What works in normal operations often breaks down under audit conditions.
Reality: AI improves detection speed and classification accuracy. It does not replace governance. Asset retirement, reclassification, and impairment decisions carry balance sheet consequences that require a documented human decision. A widely cited Foundry Research study found that 97 percent of IT decision-makers report governance, maintenance, and security as their top challenges when implementing AI initiatives. Speed of detection without governed workflow creates a faster stream of unmanaged risk.
Reality: Generic BPM platforms, ServiceNow, and Power Automate can automate routing. They do not provide an evidence model connecting physical proof to asset records, audit-grade subledger linkage, or the compliance-grade human-in-the-loop structure that financial reporting requires. Asset orchestration is a different capability from general process automation.
Reality: ERP systems govern accounting transactions. They do not govern the physical-to-financial evidence chain that keeps those transactions accurate. The ERP records what it is told. Orchestration governs what it gets told and when.
Asset management orchestration is the governed control layer that routes physical asset evidence through defined review, approval, remediation, and ERP synchronization steps. It converts raw inspection and tracking data into audit-ready accounting entries.
Asset tracking tells you where an asset is. Orchestration governs what happens after a discrepancy is found: who reviews it, what evidence they see, what decision they make, how remediation is triggered, and how the result reaches the fixed asset subledger.
No. Generic workflow tools automate routing but lack three things asset orchestration requires: an evidence model connecting physical proof to asset records, audit-grade linkage to the fixed asset subledger, and compliance-grade human-in-the-loop governance.
Capture tools produce immediate, visible outputs. The value of a governed downstream workflow is harder to see until exceptions accumulate and audit cycles reveal the gap.
AI improves the speed and accuracy of evidence classification, anomaly detection, and document extraction. Orchestration governs what happens after AI produces a result. AI raises the quality of the input. Orchestration ensures the output is governed, auditable, and connected to systems of record.
Asset Relationship Management (ARM) is a category of software that verifies the physical existence, location, and condition of assets and reconciles that evidence with ERP financial records through a governed orchestration workflow. ARM sits above ERP and asset tracking tools as the evidence and control layer between physical operations and financial reporting.
IAS 16 and ASC 360 require that asset records reflect physical reality. Componentization, impairment testing, and retirement recognition all depend on accurate, current asset data with a documented evidence trail. Orchestration is the process that keeps that data current and provides the audit trail that demonstrates compliance.
The organizations that struggle with fixed asset accuracy are not struggling because they lack data. They are struggling because the data they have never makes it through a governed process that produces a result the balance sheet can rely on.
Closing that gap does not require more sensors or a better dashboard. It requires a control layer that takes evidence from wherever it originates, routes it through the right human decisions at the right points, applies the correct accounting treatment, and writes a verified result back to the system of record with a complete audit trail. For organizations that implement this layer, the immediate operational outcome is the elimination of manual journal entry handoffs and the audit preparation sprint that consumes weeks of finance team time before every cycle.
SoloTruth Asset Relationship Management (ARM) is the evidence-grade platform built for this workflow. ARM connects physical inspection, AI-assisted document extraction, controller-approved accounting decisions, and direct ERP reconciliation in a single governed process. The output is not visibility. It is a verified, audit-ready subledger entry with a complete evidence chain behind it.
Book a 30-minute strategy call at calendly.com/tim-harris-solotruth/30min to see how continuous verification changes what your fixed asset register is actually capable of.
Last Updated: May 2026