BOS VENDOR connects vendors directly to the BOSJEK ordering network, functioning as the receiving and management layer for incoming customer orders. The app is categorized as a business and sales management application, developed with Indonesian market conventions — currency displayed as Rp, date formats consistent with local standards, and all interface labels in Indonesian.
What the Screens Show
- The Orders dashboard (Pesanan) lists incoming orders with unique IDs, product counts, dates, amounts in Indonesian Rupiah, and color-coded statuses — green for delivered (Terkirin), red for cancelled (Dibatalkan). Orders can be filtered across three tabs: All, Pending, and Scheduled.
- The Products screen (Produk) displays your inventory with a search bar, product images, names, prices, and three inline action buttons per item — edit, remove from listing, and delete. New products are added via a blue "Produk baru" button pinned to the bottom of the screen.
- The Sales report view presents a weekly order summary with a chart area, total order count, and total earnings figure — all scoped to a selected date range.
- The Settings screen (Pengaturan) covers account management: payment account configuration, profile editing, password change, notifications, FAQ, and account deletion. Version 1.6.6(60) is visible here.
Navigation and Layout
The bottom tab bar carries four sections — Orders, Products, Sales, and More — with blue used consistently to mark the active state. Within sections, a secondary top-tab system handles filtering. The overall palette is light gray backgrounds with dark text, blue for interactive highlights, and red reserved for destructive or cancelled states.
A Genuine Limitation
The interface relies heavily on red/green color coding to communicate order status and action button intent, without supplementary icons or text labels to carry that meaning independently. For users with color vision deficiencies, this creates a real usability gap — the difference between a delivered and a cancelled order, or between an edit and a delete button, depends entirely on color distinction. The chart areas in the reporting view also appear to lack descriptive labels, which affects both screen reader users and anyone trying to interpret empty-state visualizations.
BOS VENDOR is a compact, task-focused vendor tool — its strength is its directness, but the color-only status signaling is a design choice that limits its accessibility without much apparent gain in simplicity.