
SAS Visual Forecasting
Predictive analytics software
Time series intelligence software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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Medium
Large
- Banking and insurance
- Healthcare and life sciences
- Retail and wholesale
What is SAS Visual Forecasting
SAS Visual Forecasting is an enterprise forecasting and time series analytics product used to build, evaluate, and operationalize forecasts at scale. It supports business and data science users who need demand, finance, operations, or other time-dependent forecasts with automated model selection and governance. The product emphasizes large-scale forecasting pipelines, hierarchical and intermittent-demand scenarios, and integration with the broader SAS analytics platform for deployment and monitoring.
Enterprise-scale forecasting automation
The product is designed to generate and manage large numbers of forecasts across many items, locations, or business units. It supports automated model selection and batch processing to reduce manual analyst effort. This fits organizations that need repeatable forecasting processes rather than one-off analyses.
Strong time series methods
SAS Visual Forecasting includes a range of time series and forecasting approaches suitable for seasonality, trend, and calendar effects. It supports workflows for comparing models and tracking accuracy over time. These capabilities align with teams that need rigorous forecasting rather than general-purpose dashboards.
Operational deployment integration
The product integrates with SAS platform components for data access, model management, and operational scoring. It supports production-oriented workflows where forecasts feed downstream planning or reporting systems. This can reduce the need to stitch together separate tools for modeling and deployment.
SAS ecosystem dependency
Many deployments work best when the organization already uses SAS infrastructure and administration practices. Integrating into non-SAS-first environments can require additional engineering and platform alignment. This can increase switching costs compared with more standalone analytics tools.
Complexity for casual users
The product targets enterprise forecasting programs and can be more complex than lightweight analytics or BI-oriented tools. Teams may need specialized skills to configure pipelines, governance, and model evaluation standards. This can lengthen time-to-value for smaller organizations.
Licensing and infrastructure overhead
Enterprise SAS products typically involve negotiated licensing and may require dedicated infrastructure planning (on-premises or cloud). Budgeting and procurement can be more involved than consumption-based services. Ongoing administration and upgrades may also require dedicated support.
Seller details
SAS Institute Inc.
Cary, North Carolina, USA
1976
Private
https://www.sas.com/
https://x.com/SASsoftware
https://www.linkedin.com/company/sas/