
smartAPS
Advanced planning and scheduling (APS) software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is smartAPS
smartAPS is an advanced planning and scheduling (APS) application used to create and optimize production schedules based on constraints such as capacity, materials, and due dates. It is typically used by manufacturing planners and schedulers to sequence work orders, manage bottlenecks, and evaluate schedule scenarios. The product is generally positioned as a specialized APS layer that can integrate with an existing ERP/MRP system rather than replacing it.
Constraint-based scheduling focus
smartAPS centers on finite-capacity scheduling and sequencing, which helps planners build schedules that reflect real resource limits. This is useful for environments with shared machines, labor constraints, and frequent changeovers. Compared with ERP-native planning modules, a dedicated APS tool can provide more detailed dispatching and what-if scheduling workflows.
Scenario and rescheduling workflows
APS users often need to re-plan quickly when priorities, material availability, or machine status changes. smartAPS is designed for iterative scheduling, allowing planners to adjust constraints and regenerate schedules. This supports day-to-day production control where manual spreadsheet scheduling becomes difficult to maintain.
Designed to integrate with ERP
smartAPS is commonly implemented alongside an existing ERP/MRP system to consume demand, BOM/routing, inventory, and work order data. This approach can reduce disruption versus replacing core transactional systems. It also allows organizations to keep master data governance in the ERP while using APS for detailed sequencing.
Integration effort can be material
APS value depends on accurate, timely data from ERP and shop-floor systems (items, routings, calendars, inventory, order status). If interfaces are not prebuilt for a company’s ERP, integration can require custom mapping and ongoing maintenance. Data quality issues can lead to schedules that planners do not trust.
Requires strong master data
Finite scheduling needs detailed and correct routings, setup times, resource calendars, and constraint definitions. Many manufacturers have incomplete or outdated master data, which can slow implementation and reduce optimization quality. Organizations may need a data cleanup project before results are reliable.
Limited public vendor transparency
Publicly available information about product editions, pricing, and packaged connectors is limited compared with larger APS suites. This can make early-stage evaluation harder, especially for buyers who need clear documentation on capabilities, deployment options, and support model. Prospective customers may need direct vendor engagement to validate fit.