Finley's Crunchy Dog Biscuits, Apple and Cinnamon, Plant-Based Healthy Treats, Oven Baked Dog Cookies, 12oz, 6 Pack
Finleys · listing B0CQ69SY2K · 6-pack · ordered from Finleys
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 14 units sold in the last 90 days.How to use it: High: order as suggested. Medium: read the reasons, then decide. Low: open the product page and check before ordering.Read the reasons in the hover, then decide.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.
Selling per day Selling per dayWhat it is: How many units of this product we expect to sell in a typical day right now.Where it comes from: Our sales forecast for this product — built from our own sales history and routinely checked against what actually sold. For reference, the note under the number shows actual sales over the last 30 days.How to use it: Multiply by a number of days to see how much stock that time needs. A higher rate means stock runs down faster, so dates matter more.
9.5
our checked sales forecast for this product — for reference, you sold 147 units in the last 30 days (≈ 4.9 a day, counted through Thu Jul 2)
Days of stock 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.
≈ 79
305 at Amazon (counted yesterday) + 80 in our warehouse (counted 2 days ago)
Arriving 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.
369
369 units inbound to Amazon or on open vendor orders
Suggested order 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.
128 cases
768 units at 6 per case
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.
Today
days of stock minus the safety cushion (about 109 days). Vendor delivery: about 17 days — typical delivery time from this vendor's own past orders
Expected to sell about 9.5 a day. 385 on hand + 369 arriving = about 79 days of stock. Delivery (about 31 days door to shelf) plus a safety cushion take about 109 days, so order today (Mon Jul 6). To stay stocked, you want about 160 days of stock — about 1,518 units; you have 754, so order about 764 units (128 cases of 6). Safety cushionWhat it is: The days of stock this product keeps in reserve so it doesn't run out while an order is still on its way.Where it comes from: Delivery door to shelf (the vendor making and shipping it, then Amazon checking it in and shelving it), the gap between our order checks, and a buffer of extra stock for busy weeks.How to use it: When days of stock falls to the cushion, order. The order-by date is exactly days of stock minus the cushion — you can check it with a calendar.
When could it run out?
Counting everything on hand and arriving: as early as Thu Aug 13 if it sells at the fast end of what we expect, as late as Wed Mar 31 at the slow end. How: 754 units available (on hand + arriving) ÷ the fast and slow ends of our forecast for all pack sizes of this product.
Last 90 days
Amazon's stock line ends Sun Jul 5 — that's the newest count we have, not today's.
Your adjustments
Currently the suggestion (128 cases).
Currently 17 days — typical delivery time from this vendor's own past orders.
The suggestion stocks up to enough for this many days of expected sales, plus the safety cushion. Currently 90 days (standard).