fitgap

QAD Digital Supply Chain Planning (DSCP)

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if QAD Digital Supply Chain Planning (DSCP) and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Contact the product provider
Free Trial unavailable
Free version unavailable
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Manufacturing
  2. Healthcare and life sciences
  3. Agriculture, fishing, and forestry

What is QAD Digital Supply Chain Planning (DSCP)

QAD Digital Supply Chain Planning (DSCP) is a supply chain planning application used to model, plan, and synchronize demand, supply, inventory, and capacity across a multi-site network. It supports planning teams and operations leaders with scenario analysis and planning workflows that connect to execution systems such as ERP and manufacturing. The product emphasizes end-to-end planning visibility and cross-functional alignment (including S&OP/IBP-style processes) using a digital model of the supply chain.

pros

End-to-end planning coverage

DSCP is designed to connect demand planning, supply planning, inventory positioning, and capacity considerations in a single planning environment. This helps teams evaluate trade-offs across functions rather than optimizing each area in isolation. It fits organizations that need multi-site, multi-echelon planning with coordinated constraints and policies.

Scenario and what-if planning

The product supports building and comparing alternative scenarios to evaluate the impact of changes in demand, supply constraints, lead times, or policies. This is useful for exception management and for S&OP cycles where planners need to quantify options before committing. Scenario capabilities align with digital-twin-style planning use cases focused on decision support rather than engineering simulation.

Alignment with manufacturing-centric ERP

As part of the QAD ecosystem, DSCP is commonly positioned for manufacturers that want planning tightly connected to operational master data and execution processes. This can reduce integration effort compared with assembling separate planning components from multiple vendors. It is particularly relevant where QAD ERP is already the system of record and planning needs consistent item, BOM, routing, and site data.

cons

Digital twin scope is planning-focused

DSCP’s “digital” model primarily supports planning and scenario decisions rather than high-fidelity physics-based or engineering-grade simulation. Organizations looking for detailed equipment/process simulation or product engineering twins may need additional specialized tools. This can limit use cases such as detailed manufacturing line simulation or advanced mechatronic modeling.

Integration still requires effort

Even when used alongside ERP, planning deployments typically require data harmonization, governance, and ongoing master-data quality management. Connecting to external data sources (e.g., logistics providers, MES, or IoT platforms) can add integration work and may require middleware or custom interfaces. Time-to-value depends heavily on data readiness and process standardization.

Complexity for smaller teams

End-to-end planning and S&OP workflows can introduce process and configuration complexity for organizations with limited planning maturity. Users may need training to interpret scenario outputs, constraints, and exceptions correctly. Smaller companies may find the breadth of functionality more than they need if they only require basic MRP-style planning.

Seller details

QAD Inc.
Santa Barbara, California, USA
1979
Private
https://www.qad.com/
https://x.com/QADinc
https://www.linkedin.com/company/qad/

Tools by QAD Inc.

QAD Adaptive ERP
QAD EQMS
QAD Global Trade & Transportation Execution
QAD Digital Supply Chain Planning (DSCP)
QAD Supplier Relationship Management
QAD Digital Commerce
QAD Foreign-Trade Zone
QAD Free Trade Agreement

Popular categories

All categories