The activities associated with validating material and production asset availability, assigning orders to production assets, sequencing production activities and monitoring and correcting production progress. This may include creating or approving Requisitions (for Production Orders) recommended and/or created by the Production Planning process.
This is a Make-to-Stock process; Demand is aggregated to optimal quantities to produce. Planning and scheduling primarily focus on optimizing throughput (capacity utilization) and efficiency.
Use Cases
Notes
Typically Create Schedule involves converting the daily or weekly production plan into smaller segments. Examples of schedule segments are: shifts, production/assembly lines, processing units, production/assembly cells. Other aspects to consider in production scheduling are timing of material and labor availability, sequencing for size, grade, color, contamination, batch sizes, maintenance schedules, regulatory compliance, mix flexibility. Production plans may consider some of these aspects, but generally production plans do not need this level of granularity for planning purposes.
This process is generally supported by a Shop Floor Control System or Manufacturing Execution System.
Make Cycle Time
Days of WIP Inventory
Days of Finished Goods Inventory
Bill of Materials
Manufacturing BOM
Work Order
Plan-to-Produce
Hierarchy
ID | Name | Level | x | M1 | Make-to-Stock | 2 | M1 |
M101 | Create Schedule | 3 | M101 |
Workflow
Note: Common inputs and outputs are listed in alphabetical order. Other inputs and outputs may be required to support varying use cases.Create Schedule Make-to-Stock 5310100 3 Create Production Schedule, Work Orders, Scheduling, Material Availability, MRP, Bill-of-Materials, BOM, Sequencing, Shop Floor, Manufacturing, Manufacturing Execution System, MES, Supply Chain, Operations Scheduling production activities, validating material and production asset availability, assigning orders to production assets, sequencing production activities and monitoring and correcting production progress