Over 3 million children and period-supply recipients in the US depend on essential item banks -- organizations that distribute diapers, period products, and hygiene supplies to families in need. Unlike food banks, these organizations track inventory by pack size, manage partner organizations with different distribution models, and must report impact data to funders. Most essential item banks run on spreadsheets or generic inventory software that doesn't understand their distribution model. They can't easily track which partners received what, forecast demand, or generate the compliance reports that funders require. The lack of purpose-built software means staff spend hours on manual data entry instead of serving families, and organizations can't scale to meet growing demand.