S&OP, Demand Planning & Forecasting calculator

Schedule Stability Score Calculator

Estimate schedule stability for sandop, demand planning and forecasting using production-ready inputs so teams can rank risks and decide which issue needs containment, controls, or escalation first. Score severity, occurrence, and detection to get a single weighted risk number for ranking.

What this calculator does

  • Estimate schedule stability for sandop, demand planning and forecasting using production-ready inputs so teams can rank risks and decide which issue needs containment, controls, or escalation first.
  • Use it when schedule stability in s and op, demand planning and forecasting needs a defensible ranking against other s and op, demand planning and forecasting risks for the next review.
  • Turns schedule stability severity score, schedule stability occurrence score, schedule stability detection score into a risk score for schedule stability in s and op, demand planning and forecasting.

Formula used

  • Schedule stability risk score = schedule stability severity score × schedule stability occurrence score × schedule stability detection score
  • Use the same scoring scale across comparable schedule stability risks.

Inputs explained

  • Schedule stability severity score: Score the impact using the same FMEA, quality, safety, delivery, or business-risk scale used by the team.
  • Schedule stability occurrence score: Score how often the issue appears using defect history, field data, maintenance records, or supplier performance.
  • Schedule stability detection score: Score how likely current controls are to catch the issue before shipment, use, or customer impact.

How to use the result

  • Use it when schedule stability in s and op, demand planning and forecasting is going through an FMEA or hazard review.
  • Scores are subjective. Use them to rank, not to claim absolute risk.

Common questions

  • What does the schedule stability score calculator give me? Estimate schedule stability for sandop, demand planning and forecasting using production-ready inputs so teams can rank risks and decide which issue needs containment, controls, or escalation first. You get a risk score you can defend before quoting, scheduling, or sign-off.
  • Which assumptions drive the risk score? schedule stability severity score, schedule stability occurrence score, schedule stability detection score usually move the risk score most. Pull from measured s and op, demand planning and forecasting runs, supplier data, and recent quotes rather than memory.
  • How should I act on the output? Use the score to rank against other s and op, demand planning and forecasting risks. Treat it as a sort key, not an absolute number.
  • What can throw the result off? Validate scoring with a second person; scores are subjective and drift between reviewers.

Last reviewed 2026-05-12.