How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the BOM Scrub

February 26
17 mins

Episode Description

In this episode of Sourced by Cofactr, Ed tackles one of the most misunderstood—and underestimated—rituals in hardware: the BOM scrub. What sounds like a tedious spreadsheet cleanup is actually the critical bridge between a working schematic and a shippable product. Ed breaks down why engineering BOMs are almost never factory-ready, and how small data issues—typos in manufacturer part numbers, distributor-specific suffixes, outdated manufacturer names after acquisitions—create “data rot” that quietly sabotages automation and scale. Part matching, he argues, isn’t clerical work; it’s the foundation for a clean, portable, system-ready BOM that won’t collapse under the weight of growth.


From there, he reframes the BOM scrub as a strategic risk assessment spanning compliance (RoHS, REACH, PFAS), lifecycle status (NRND, EOL, last-time buys), and real-world availability. A matched part isn’t the same as a buildable part—and a missing 10-cent capacitor can shut down a $1,000 product line. Through the lens of multi-sourcing, obsolescence planning, and certification risk, Ed makes the case that the BOM scrub isn’t janitorial—it’s immunization against chaos. For hardware teams moving from prototype to production, this episode is a playbook for turning a fragile parts list into a resilient, revenue-protecting supply chain strategy.

See all episodes