Review the due lines, adjust case quantities if needed, then create the suggested PO artifact.
| Product ProductWhat it is: What you are ordering from this vendor, one line per warehouse product (a case pack you buy).Where it comes from: Our catalog. The small text lists the Amazon listings this product feeds.How to use it: Click through to the product page for the chart, the full arithmetic and the edit controls. | Demand | Position On handWhat it is: Units we can sell right now, everywhere we hold stock.Where it comes from: Amazon's warehouse count plus our own warehouse count. Each shows when it was last counted — an old count is a less reliable number.How to use it: This plus arriving is everything between you and running out. If a count looks stale or wrong, check before trusting a large number. ArrivingWhat it is: Units already ordered from the vendor that have not arrived yet.Where it comes from: Open purchase orders in our purchasing records: quantity ordered minus quantity received.How to use it: These already count toward your days of stock, so don't order them again. If something should be arriving but isn't listed, check the order with the vendor. Days of stockWhat it is: How many days until this product runs out if it keeps selling at the expected rate.Where it comes from: (On hand + arriving) ÷ selling per day, using the exact numbers shown on this line.How to use it: Compare it to the safety cushion shown in the sentence. When days of stock falls to the cushion, it's time to order — that's exactly what the order-by date says. | Order by Order byWhat it is: The last day you can place this order and still get it before the product runs out.Where it comes from: Today plus (days of stock minus the safety cushion in days). If that lands today or earlier, it shows as order today.How to use it: Plan your day around the earliest of these dates. Past-due dates mean some days out of stock are already unavoidable — order anyway to shorten them. | Suggested buy Suggested orderWhat it is: The order that brings this product up to the level the numbers say to keep — enough for the days of stock named in the sentence, safety cushion included.Where it comes from: The stock-up-to level in the sentence (about N days at the expected selling rate) minus what you have on hand and arriving, rounded up to whole cases. It's the same quantity our purchasing review screen recommends — one number, everywhere.How to use it: Order this many unless you know something the numbers don't — a promotion, a discontinue, a pack change. Type your own number and everything recalculates; your number is kept and labeled. | Your cases Your order (cases)What it is: The number of cases you'll actually order — it starts at the suggestion.Where it comes from: Yours to set. The suggestion comes from the arithmetic on the line (hover 'Suggested order').How to use it: Type a whole number of cases — the line value and the vendor total update as you type. Your number is saved, survives the nightly refresh, and shows as 'your qty'. | Line $ Line valueWhat it is: What this line costs at the vendor's case price.Where it comes from: Your cases × the case cost on file for this product.How to use it: Watch the order total against the vendor minimum as you adjust. A dash means we have no case cost on file — the total below notes it. | Actions |
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Let's Bake Bread Mix 17.64oz Organic Vienna Sourdough Rye 16/cs MediumConfidenceWhat it is: How much to trust the numbers on this line: High, Medium, or Low.Where it comes from: A fixed rule, not a judgment call. Low: no sales of our own to base it on, or the number comes from a fallback. Medium: a named caveat — Amazon itself sells the listing, thin history, or our reads disagree. High: steady own sales and nothing off. The exact reasons are listed in this box on the product page. For this line: thin history — only 1 units sold in the last 90 days; fewer than five received orders, so this uses the standard order-check gap; wide range — check this one.How to use it: High: order as suggested. Medium: read the reasons, then decide. Low: open the product page and check before ordering.Order nowOrder nowWhat it is: The numbers say to order this today — stock (counting what's arriving) no longer covers the safety cushion.Where it comes from: Days of stock at or below the safety cushion (delivery door to shelf, check-in at Amazon, the gap between order checks, and a buffer for busy weeks). Nothing softens this badge — not rounding, not your settings.How to use it: Handle these first — every day of delay is roughly a day out of stock at the expected selling rate.irregular order patternwide range You sell about 0/week. You have 0 on hand and coming — about 0.0 weeks. Let's Bake Bread takes about 34 days, so order by Mon Jul 6. To cover through your next order and delivery you want about 34-42 units; you have 0, so buy 34-42 units, which is 2-3 cases of 16 (aim 2). Demand by packPosition breakdown0 Warehouse as of not on file 0 Amazon on hand Sun Jul 5 0 Inbound to Amazon Sun Jul 5 0 Open vendor orders as of not on file Breakdown total: 0 units. Trusted position: 0 units. Source check residual: 0. Reserved or unsellable Amazon units are shown separately and not counted. Why this quantity checks outLive engine: 3 cases. W6 aim: 2 cases. Difference is horizon 0 units plus case rounding -2 units. Residual: 0. Amazon signal: 16 units (Fri Jun 19) — Amazon signal is stale; do not use it as a disagreement. | 0 units / week · up | 0 0.0 weeks as of Sun Jul 5 | Today runs out Mon Jul 6 | aim 2 cases 2-3 cases 32 units | Coverdays | $296.00 |