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IBM Sterling Intelligent Promising

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
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Pricing from
$700 per month
Free Trial
Free version unavailable
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Transportation and logistics
  2. Manufacturing
  3. Healthcare and life sciences

What is IBM Sterling Intelligent Promising

IBM Sterling Intelligent Promising is an order promising and fulfillment decisioning component within the IBM Sterling Order Management portfolio. It helps retailers, manufacturers, and distributors determine feasible delivery dates and sourcing options by evaluating inventory, capacity, lead times, and fulfillment constraints across nodes. The product is typically used to improve order capture, reduce split shipments, and support omnichannel fulfillment scenarios through configurable rules and integrations with commerce, ERP, WMS, and carrier systems.

pros

Advanced order promising logic

Supports complex available-to-promise and capable-to-promise scenarios using multiple inputs such as on-hand inventory, inbound supply, lead times, and node constraints. It can evaluate alternative sourcing and fulfillment paths to meet service-level targets. This depth is often required in multi-node, omnichannel networks where simpler inventory allocation approaches are insufficient.

Fits enterprise OMS architectures

Aligns with enterprise order management deployments that need centralized promising across multiple channels and fulfillment locations. It is designed to integrate with upstream order capture and downstream execution systems rather than operate as a standalone inventory tool. This makes it suitable for organizations standardizing fulfillment logic across commerce, call center, and marketplace orders.

Configurable rules and constraints

Provides configuration options to model business constraints such as fulfillment priorities, node eligibility, shipping methods, and service commitments. This helps teams encode policies like ship-from-store vs. DC preference, regional restrictions, or inventory protection rules. The approach supports governance and repeatability compared with ad-hoc logic embedded in individual storefronts or channels.

cons

Implementation complexity and effort

Deployments typically require significant solution design, data modeling, and integration work across inventory, order, and logistics systems. Organizations often need specialized skills to configure promising rules and validate outcomes at scale. This can make time-to-value longer than lighter-weight order and inventory tools aimed at smaller operations.

Requires strong data quality

Promising accuracy depends on timely, consistent inventory, supply, and capacity signals from connected systems. If inventory accuracy, lead times, or node calendars are unreliable, the system can produce conservative or incorrect promise dates. Many teams must invest in upstream process and master-data improvements to realize expected benefits.

Not a finance-first system

Although it supports order and fulfillment decisions, it does not replace core accounting functions such as general ledger, statutory reporting, or full financial close. Companies typically still rely on ERP or dedicated finance platforms for accounting and revenue recognition. Buyers expecting an all-in-one accounting suite may find functional gaps without additional systems.

Plan & Pricing

Plan Price Key features & notes
Essentials Starting at $700 per month* Accurate delivery promise; multiple delivery & pickup options (PLP/PDP/cart/checkout); estimated delivery date (EDD) improves online sales (1–3% cited); Minimum annual order lines: 100,000; Transactional APIs & events per order line: 300; Inventory actions throttle threshold: 30 million; Includes production + non-production environments; Billing: monthly, quarterly or yearly; 99.9% SLA; Standard support.
Standard Not publicly listed / Contact IBM Manage inventory across your network; improves digital conversions and in-store sales; reduces fulfillment shipping costs (6–12% cited); Minimum annual order lines: 100,000; Transactional APIs & events per order line: 500; Inventory actions throttle threshold: 50 million; Unlimited fulfillment locations; Billing: monthly, quarterly or yearly; 99.9% SLA; Standard support.
Premium Not publicly listed / Contact IBM AI-powered promising & optimization (cost- or customer-choice-based); reduces overall inventory costs (3–7% cited); Minimum annual order lines: 100,000; Transactional APIs & events per order line: 800; Inventory actions throttle threshold: 80 million; Includes AI/ML platform, data export to cloud object storage; Billing: monthly, quarterly or yearly; 99.9% SLA; Standard support; Premium support available for purchase above certain volumes.

Seller details

IBM
Armonk, New York, USA
1911
Public
https://www.ibm.com
https://x.com/IBM
https://www.linkedin.com/company/ibm/

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