Note: This walkthrough must be performed on a demonstration company with the Full Evaluation - Complete Sample Data option, which is available in the Sandbox environment. For more information, see Creating a Sandbox Environment.
This walkthrough demonstrates the process of planning supply orders to fulfill new demand. You can initiate supply planning at fixed intervals, for example, every morning or every Monday, or when you are notified by sales or production, depending on the type of demand. In this walkthrough you will use the Order Planning page, a simple supply planning tool that is based on manual decision-making instead of parameter-based automatic planning.
This walkthrough illustrates the following tasks:
This walkthrough demonstrates tasks performed by the following user roles:
Before you begin this walkthrough, you must install the Business Central . The following modifications must be made to the database:
Delete all planned and firm planned production orders. Do not delete started orders with entries that are already posted.
As a rule, use the suggested data in this walkthrough because this data has the necessary records.
Eduardo, the Production Planner of a small manufacturing company, is about to plan production and purchase orders to fulfill new sales demand.
Because the products have few BOM levels and the flow of orders is relatively low, Eduardo uses the Order Planning page to manually create supply orders, one product level at a time.
In a more complex manufacturing environment, the planning worksheet is used to plan supply based on item parameters such as rescheduling period, safety lead time, reorder point, and batch calculations of consolidated demand from all product levels.
The standard CRONUS demonstration company currently has lots of unplanned demand. During the different planning tasks in this walkthrough, you will have to deviate from the realistic business flow by ignoring demand with close due dates and instead use demand with later due dates.
Choose the icon, enter Order Planning, and then choose the related link.
When the Order Planning page first opens, a plan must be calculated to show the new demand since it was last calculated.
Choose the Calculate Plan action.
The planning system analyzes any new demand that has been introduced, such as new sales, changed sales, or production orders.
Based on total availability, the quantity needed for each demand line is calculated. This calculation is performed order-by-order. This means that the order which includes the demand line with the earliest due date or shipment date will be calculated first. After that, additional demand lines will be calculated in the same order, regardless of the due date or shipment date.
Be sure that the Order Planning page is maximized and that column fields are resized to show all the default field names.
When the calculation is completed, the page displays all unfulfilled demand as collapsed order header lines sorted by earliest demand date.
Notice that CRONUS has several orders with unfulfilled demand. Each bold planning line represents an order, sales order, or production order, including at least one order line with insufficient availability.
In the Show Demand As field, select the All Demand filter.
With the Demand Type field, you can choose which order types that you want to display.
Orders that do not have availability problems are not shown. If no orders exist when a plan is calculated, a message will display and no planning lines will appear.
In this procedure, you create a purchase order for needed manufacturing components.
In the Replenishment System field, select Purchase.
The default value is from the item card, or SKU card, but you can change it to one of the following options:
In the Supply From field, select one of the following options according to the selected replenishment system:
Location – For transfers
If the field is not filled in, an error message will display when you try to create the supply orders.
If the components have a default vendor number set up on the item cards, the lines will be preset.
Choose the Supply From field.
Copy vendor 30000 to the other lines for loudspeaker components on this production order.
You are now ready to create a purchase order.
Choose the Make Orders action. The Make Supply Orders page opens.
Choose the OK button to create purchase orders for all the components of the order.
The purchase orders are now created and saved as the last orders in the list of purchase orders.
In this procedure, you will plan for demand from a sales order. Demand lines represent sales lines and not component lines, as in production demand.
Expand the line and move the pointer to the demand line.
Sales order 2008 is for ten loudspeakers, item LS-120, ordered by John Haddock Insurance Co.
The item’s defined replenishment system and default vendor will display.
At the bottom of the page, there are four information fields. In the Earliest Date Available field, the ten pieces that are needed will be available, on an inbound supply order, nine days later than the current due date. If this is too late for the customer, the Available for Transfer field shows 13 pieces of the item at another location. You will want to plan for this stock.
Choose the Available for Transfer field to open the Get Alternative Supply page.
Choose the OK button to book the ten items that are available.
In the demand line, the suggested purchase has been exchanged with a transfer from GREEN location. The Make Orders function creates a transfer order from GREEN to the demanded location. The Substitutes Exists field works in the same way.
Choose the Make Orders action. The Make Supply Orders page opens.
Choose the OK button to create the transfer order to supply the sales order.
The transfer order is now created and saved in the list as the last order in the list of open transfer orders.
In this procedure, you will plan to fulfill sales demand for a produced item with multiple product levels, each creating dependent production demand.
Select the planning line with sales demand for order 1001, created earlier as prerequisite data.
This demand is a sales line, but the item has a defined replenishment system of Prod. Order. Proceed to add an extra bell to the component need of each bicycle.
Choose the Components action to open the Planning Components page.
Choose the Make Orders action to create the production order.
On the Order Planning page, notice that the planning line for sales order 1001 no longer exists and that the initial sales demand has been covered.
Close the Order Planning page.
Now, you could choose to stay in this view and complete all the planning tasks. Instead, you will now take on the Production Planner role by going to the production order that you just created and access the Order Planning page.
As a production planner you now must plan a specific production order.
Choose the Planning action.
The Order Planning page opens in a view that is always filtered on the specific production demand. Sales demand is not displayed. You must calculate a plan before you can see any additional demand.
Choose the Calculate Plan action.
Notice that four new production orders appear as unplanned production demand derived from order 101001. The new lines represent new production demand from the subassemblies that must be created to produce the order.
Choose the Expand All action to get an overview of all the production demand for the production orders.
To provide additional information about the demand lines, you may want to add the Demand Quantity and Demand Qty. Available fields to your view.
Now you must supply ten of each component.
Note that four of the demand lines have replenishment system Prod. Order. These four subassemblies represent the second product level of the bicycle.
The default replenishment settings are already filled in and you can proceed to make orders.
Choose the Make Orders action.
Before you choose the OK button, notice the text on the Order Planning FastTab. This text is important because you know that the bicycle has several produced components, subassemblies, in its product structure that might be in demand when you create this production order.
On the Make Supply Order page, in the Make Orders for field, choose the All Lines option, and then choose the OK button to create production orders for the second product level of the order.
Note that the top-level production demand for production order 101001 no longer exists. This means that the initial production demand for subassemblies has been planned for.
On the Order Planning page, you calculate a plan again in order to plan the bicycle structure.
Choose the Calculate Plan action to recalculate the plan as instructed by the embedded Help text.
The two new lines represent additional production demand derived from the subassemblies planned in the previous steps. It is suggested that you make two production orders to supply the wheel hubs, one for 10 front hubs and one for 10 back hubs.
Choose the Expand All action to get an overview of all the demand for the two production orders.
The suggested supply plan indicates that a total of four purchase orders will be created for the components. You decide to make the proposed orders.
Choose the Make Orders action.
Choose the Calculate Plan action.
The message indicates that all required items are now supplied. Verify the firm planned production orders that are created.
Choose the icon, enter Firm Planned Prod. Orders, and then choose the related link.
On the Firm Planned Prod. Orders page review how start times and end times of individual orders are scheduled according to the product structure. The lowest-level components are produced first. Therefore, you must plan multilevel orders as demonstrated in this planning workflow.
Business Process Walkthroughs
Walkthrough: Planning Supplies Automatically
© 2019 Microsoft. All rights reserved.