Skip to main content
All CollectionsSite Management
Site Management: Hierarchy Overview
Site Management: Hierarchy Overview

A breakdown of Aliquot's hierarchy structure.

Updated this week

Site Managment:

Image of the aliquot management settings tab.

Aliquot's layered hierarchy allows users to customize their customer accounts to create a simple single location or a more complex customer with multiple locations. Administrators can use this to manage customers and their locations, filter for reports, and control user access to different locations and metrics.

Hierarchy Structure:

1.) Client

The Client layer is where you can manage your organization, or different divisions of your organization.

Best Practice: We suggest only having one client if the organization does not contain multiple divisions that require different configurations within the software.

Note: Any user that is not a 'Global User' will only see their assigned Client in the organization. Under "My Organization" Client Users will not have permission to edit the Client layer.


2.) Customer

The customer layer can be populated by a specific customer name or a specific region of a customer. The address and phone would be best listed as the headquarters of your customer. There are toggles to label a customer as a prospect and options to specify if the customer is active or not.

Best Practice: Going forward, it is important to consider your management policy for creating new customers. Doing so can help ensure that your process keeps duplicate customers from being created (e.g., Having customer additions go through multiple stages of approval before the addition is finalized).


3.) Facility

The Facility layer allows specification of the individual location of a customer's buildings and systems. In this layer, details like address, contact info, and even units of measurement can be specified.

Example: A comparison for the facility layer can be made to a company like Hilton Hotels. Their company operates on a large scale and in many different regions (e.g., Philadelphia Hilton, NYC Hilton). The facilities layer can be used to categorize these regions into individual locations.


4.) Building

The building layer can be used to categorize and segment different operating addresses based upon a specific city or geographic location.

Example: Given the previous example, if Philadelphia Hilton were selected as the facility, that region's different operating locations would populate the building layer.


5.) System

The System layer is each of the areas within a building that require testing. Reports all reside at the system layer and can be broken down by competent. This layer is also where all test data is stored for reports.

Example: A cooling system has multiple components (raw water, chill loop, cooling tower, etc.) The system layer allows configuration of reports to show components and their associated tests without unnecessary data being pulled from other systems.

Did this answer your question?