Understanding a few core concepts will make it much easier to navigate SAFIO and interpret the information throughout the application. This page introduces the fundamental building blocks used across forecasting, inventory planning, purchasing, and reporting.
Overview #
SAFIO organizes planning information around products, customers, time, and demand. Forecasts are generated using historical sales data and can be adjusted by planners to reflect business knowledge, promotions, seasonality, or other expected changes.
These concepts appear throughout the application and form the foundation of the planning process.
Why it Matters #
A clear understanding of these concepts helps you:
- Navigate the application more confidently.
- Understand how forecasts are generated and managed.
- Interpret reports and dashboards correctly.
- Communicate effectively with other SAFIO users.
- Make better planning and purchasing decisions.
How it Works in SAFIO #
Although every organization configures SAFIO differently, most planning workflows rely on the same core concepts:
Products
Products are the foundation of planning in SAFIO. Forecasts, inventory, purchasing activity, and reporting are all centered around products.
Product Attributes
Every product can include an unlimited number of custom attributes, such as brand, category, vendor, color, size, region, or any other business-specific classification. These attributes allow planners to filter, group, analyze, and report on data in ways that match their organization’s unique planning requirements.
Accounts
Accounts represent the customers, sales channels, locations, or business entities associated with demand. Depending on your implementation, forecasts may be managed by product, account, or both.
Sales Representatives
Forecasts can be assigned to individual sales representatives. This allows sales teams to review and maintain forecasts for their assigned accounts while planners retain overall visibility and control of the forecasting process.
Time
Planning occurs across time periods such as weeks or months. Historical periods provide demand history, while future periods contain forecasts used for planning.
Sales & Shipments
Historical sales and shipment data provide the foundation for statistical forecasting. SAFIO analyzes this historical demand to identify trends, seasonality, and recurring patterns that help predict future demand.
Forecasts
A forecast represents expected future demand. SAFIO generates statistical forecasts that planners can review and adjust using business knowledge, promotions, customer insights, or other expected changes.
Exceptions
SAFIO is designed to help planners focus on the items that require attention rather than reviewing every product individually. Exception management highlights products with significant forecast changes, inventory shortages, supply risks, or other conditions that may require action. This allows planners to spend more time making informed decisions and less time searching for potential issues.
Curves
Curves describe how demand is expected to be distributed over time. They help create more accurate forecasts by accounting for historical sales patterns, seasonality, and product-specific demand profiles.
Inventory
Current inventory levels, incoming purchase orders, and expected demand work together to determine future inventory positions and purchasing requirements.
Vendors
Vendor information, including supplier relationships and lead times, plays an important role in purchasing and inventory planning. SAFIO uses this information to help planners understand when inventory is expected to arrive and how supplier performance impacts supply availability.
Purchase Orders
Purchase orders represent inventory that has been ordered from vendors but has not yet been received. SAFIO uses purchase order information when evaluating future inventory availability and supply planning.
Bill of Materials (BOM)
For organizations that manufacture or assemble products, Bill of Materials (BOM) relationships define how finished goods are built from component products. SAFIO uses these relationships to support demand planning and inventory analysis across multi-level product structures.
Reporting
Dashboards and reports provide visibility into forecast accuracy, inventory health, purchasing activity, and other key planning metrics, helping planners make informed business decisions.
Examples #
Examples of these concepts working together include:
- Forecasting future demand for a product based on historical sales.
- Adjusting a forecast before a seasonal promotion.
- Reviewing inventory projections alongside open purchase orders.
- Monitoring forecast accuracy through reporting dashboards.
Best Practices #
- Learn the core concepts before exploring individual application features.
- Understand how your organization defines products, accounts, and planning periods.
- Review forecasts within the context of inventory and purchasing information.
- Use reports to validate planning decisions and identify exceptions.
Common Questions #
Do all companies use these concepts the same way?
No. Every organization configures SAFIO to fit its own planning process, but the underlying concepts remain largely the same.
Do I need to understand every concept before using SAFIO?
No. Becoming familiar with these fundamentals will make the application easier to understand, and you’ll continue learning as you work with specific features.
Where can I learn more about each concept?
Each concept has its own documentation elsewhere in the Knowledge Base with more detailed explanations, examples, and related features.
Related Topics #
- Forecasting
- Products
- Planning & Purchasing
- Reporting
- Administration
