Find the Advanced Planning and Scheduling (APS) solution that fits your specific needs.
Manufacturing planning and production scheduling may sound similar, but there are specific, distinctive factors that set the two processes apart.
Depending on your actual production needs you might need a planning solution or a scheduling solution or both.
Find the Advanced Planning and Scheduling (APS) solution that fits your specific needs.
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Manufacturing planning involved thinking strategically about your goals. During manufacturing planning, you’re probably asking some of the following questions:
Scheduling, meanwhile, is about tactics and how best to make products. Therefore, it’s important to consider:
Planning considers forecast and long-term orders, while scheduling considers detailed production demand. Scheduling predicts the effects of changes in production, interruptions, machine breakdowns, scraps and other factors. Planning, on the other hand, sets the general direction of production and dynamically sets target stock levels to meet future demand. Finally, planning supports major decisions of production capacity in the medium-long term, while scheduling reacts to real-time production and supports immediate and short- and medium-term decisions.
It’s not always clear what planning and scheduling tool fits your needs. Take our short and quick questionnaire to determine which solution is the best fit for you. Give it a try now!