
Simio Production Scheduling
Advanced planning and scheduling (APS) software
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- Energy and utilities
- Manufacturing
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What is Simio Production Scheduling
Simio Production Scheduling is an advanced planning and scheduling (APS) product used to create and optimize finite-capacity production schedules for discrete manufacturing and related operations. It is typically used by production planners and schedulers to sequence orders, manage constraints (labor, machines, materials), and evaluate schedule feasibility. The product is closely associated with Simio’s simulation-based modeling approach, which supports scenario analysis and what-if evaluation alongside scheduling outputs. It is commonly deployed where complex routings, variability, and resource constraints make spreadsheet or basic ERP scheduling insufficient.
Finite-capacity constraint scheduling
The product focuses on finite-capacity scheduling, accounting for machine, labor, and other resource constraints when generating schedules. This helps planners produce schedules that are more executable than infinite-capacity plans. It supports sequencing decisions and constraint-driven tradeoffs that are difficult to manage in general-purpose ERP planning modules. It is suited to environments with complex routings and shared resources.
Simulation-based scenario analysis
Simio’s scheduling is designed to work with simulation concepts, enabling what-if analysis on capacity, variability, and operational rules. Users can compare alternative dispatching rules, shift patterns, or resource allocations and observe schedule impacts. This is useful for evaluating policy changes before implementation. It can also support communication of schedule risk and bottlenecks using model-driven outputs.
Handles complex shop-floor logic
The approach can represent detailed operational constraints such as sequence-dependent setups, alternative resources, and non-trivial routing logic. This level of modeling can be valuable for job shops and mixed-model production where simple priority rules are insufficient. It supports more nuanced scheduling decisions than tools that rely primarily on static lead times. It can also help align scheduling with real operational rules rather than idealized assumptions.
Modeling effort and expertise
Simulation-oriented scheduling typically requires more upfront configuration than simpler APS tools that rely on standard templates. Building and maintaining accurate models can require specialized skills and ongoing data governance. Organizations without industrial engineering or operations research capability may face a longer time-to-value. Model complexity can also make change management harder when processes evolve.
Integration depends on project work
Connecting scheduling to ERP/MES data (orders, BOMs, routings, inventory, calendars) often requires integration design and validation. Data quality issues in source systems can materially affect schedule accuracy and user trust. Compared with APS modules embedded in a single ERP suite, integration may involve more coordination across systems and stakeholders. Ongoing interface monitoring may be needed to keep schedules synchronized with execution.
Not an end-to-end suite
The product addresses production scheduling rather than providing full ERP capabilities such as financials, procurement, and order management. Buyers typically need to pair it with existing ERP/MRP and shop-floor execution processes. This can increase vendor management and solution architecture complexity. Some organizations may prefer a single-suite approach even if scheduling depth is lower.
Seller details
Simio LLC
Sewickley, Pennsylvania, USA
2008
Private
https://www.simio.com/
https://x.com/simio
https://www.linkedin.com/company/simio-llc/