7 Steps to Unlocking Millions in Gross Profit Table of Contents Share The 2025 Action Plan: Eliminate Recurring Problems Companies lose Gross Margin when inefficiencies in planning, execution, and cross-functional workflows create blind spots that result in problems that no one understands how they start or how to eliminate them. Companies that identify and resolve the root causes of recurring operational challenges see significant gross margin improvement. For companies generating $100 million in gross profit, even a 1% improvement can unlock $1 million in additional profit. If you had better planning and execution, how far do you think could you move the gross margin needle? What’s Your Gross Margin Opportunity? The potential impact is real and measurable—the only questions are how much gross profit you are leaving on the table and how much of it can be captured and at what cost. At Ascent Innovations, we help companies initiate low-cost, high-value Agile ROI strategies—delivering measurable improvements within a month. This rapid business impact model helps build executive support for additional efforts. 7 Steps to Unlocking Millions in Gross Margin Step 1: Identify the Problems Costing You Money What Are the Indicators of Opportunity? What kind of problems are we talking about? It varies for every client—but to get your wheels turning, here are some common issues I’ve been helping organizations resolve: High Working Capital – Often a sign of inefficiencies in forecasting, demand planning, inventory management, receivables, or procurement. Margin Compression Despite Strong Sales – May indicate poor pricing governance, uncontrolled discounting, or breakdowns in cost pass-through processes. Frequent Budget Variances and Forecast Misses – Suggest weaknesses in forecast accuracy and cost management, leading to misaligned operational planning. Long Order-to-Delivery Lead Times – A signal of potential workflow misalignment or blind spots between sales, production, and fulfillment. Rising Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) – Points to opportunities in labor, material, and supplier management to better control variable costs. High Labor Costs and Excessive Overtime – Typically reflect upstream planning gaps, such as raw material availability or poor scheduling, limiting production efficiency and capacity. Each of these challenges represents a high-impact opportunity. With focused discovery, we can uncover the root causes behind recurring issues. And here’s the key insight: a single root cause often manifests in different ways across multiple departments. When we address the source, we not only eliminate recurring problems—we unlock broad, measurable performance gains across the organization. Step 2: Quantify the Opportunity Cost of Your Problems How much are recurring problems costing you? Many organizations underestimate the financial impact of daily firefighting—leaving significant value on the table. Through a few focused discovery sessions, we help quantify that opportunity by identifying the business impact of fixing root causes that often manifest as repeated challenges across departments. Start with strategic goals – Align leadership around core priorities to ensure the focus stays on what drives the most value. Engage at the executive level – Review what’s working, what’s not, and where improvements are most needed. Discuss how these challenges are affecting performance today—and what the organization could achieve if they were resolved. Explore at the departmental level – Assess both functional and cross-functional workflows to identify execution and reporting gaps that hinder strategic goals. Capture how these issues impact daily operations and decision-making. Develop a comprehensive issue list – Document pain points across the organization to uncover root causes and prioritize high-impact opportunities. Identify quick wins with high value – Identify low-cost, high-impact improvements that can be implemented in 3–5 weeks to deliver immediate business results and build momentum. By structuring discovery this way, we create a clear connection between strategic objectives and operational improvements—with a focus on quick wins that deliver measurable results. These early successes not only improve performance but also build executive and board-level support for further modernization and long-term transformation. Step 3: Fix the Process Gaps Are Cross-functional Hand-offs a Challenge? Businesses are structured vertically—in departments—but value is delivered horizontally, across functions. Customers don’t care about departmental boundaries; they’re impacted by how well the organization executes end-to-end. Functional silos persist within companies when systems and workflows are fragmented, making it difficult to coordinate planning and execution across the value chain. It’s like a relay race—no matter how fast each runner is, if the baton is dropped between exchanges, the race is lost. What type of problems are rooted in a siloed organization? Here are a few common symptoms of cross-functional challenges: Demand & Order Management: Misalignment Creates Delays Inaccurate demand forecasting leads to stockouts or excess inventory, tying up working capital. Manual order processing increases errors, rework, and fulfillment delays. Approval bottlenecks slow down order confirmations, delaying production start times. Impact: Orders take longer to process, increasing lead times, frustrating customers, and reducing sales velocity. Production & Inventory: Inefficiencies Drive Higher Costs Siloed production planning leads to last-minute scheduling changes, increasing labor overtime and machine downtime. Disconnected inventory management causes materials shortages, stalling production and missing customer deadlines. Rigid capacity planning prevents flexibility, making it harder to respond to demand fluctuations. Impact: Production bottlenecks increase operating costs, reduce order fill rates, and weaken Gross Margin. Logistics & Fulfillment: Shipping Disruptions and Customer Dissatisfaction Poor warehouse coordination leads to delays in picking, packing, and staging shipments. Lack of real-time tracking prevents proactive issue resolution, increasing OTIF failures. Inefficient routing and carrier selection result in higher freight costs and slower deliveries. Impact: Late shipments increase customer penalties, lost contracts, and damaged brand reputation. Inefficiencies in the order-to-delivery process erode profitability, strain cash flow, and damage customer satisfaction. Ascent helps our clients understand what can be fixed in the current environment and what would be best addressed in a future ERP upgrade. Step 4: Make Smart, Targeted System Enhancements Leverage your existing ERP for quick, high-impact wins. Rather than waiting a year or longer for the payoff of an ERP upgrade, companies can drive immediate ROI by optimizing what they already have: Fix broken or incomplete ERP processes that complicate daily execution. Improve integration between key systems … Read more
Planning Optimization in D365: The Nerve Center of Your Supply Chain Table of Contents Share Planning Optimization in D365: The Nerve Center of Your Supply Chain As a Chicago native, conversations about the delays at O’Hare airport have long-dominated small-talk topics along with our constant weather changes; construction on the Kennedy; the ’85 Bears; and out-of-state drivers. It’s for a good reason. To paraphrase Klemens von Metternich, “When O’Hare sneezes, the country catches a cold.” O’Hare is a vital airline hub in the United States with flights coming in and out at an astonishing rate. Without proper planning and predictions, it can turn into a mess really fast. Manufacturing and distribution operations are not entirely dissimilar. With constant shifts in supply and demand, it can be exceptionally difficult to generate the right orders at the right time. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management’s Planning Optimization (formerly Master Planning) module serves as the nerve center of supply chain operations, helping businesses optimize inventory, align production schedules, and ensure timely fulfillment. Whether managing day-to-day replenishment or long-term strategic planning, Planning Optimization delivers real-time insights and automation to drive efficiency and profitability. Planning Optimization: Your Supply Chain’s Air Traffic Control Using our analogy, think of Planning Optimization in D365 like an air traffic control system at a busy airport. Without it, planes (orders) would take off and land chaotically, leading to: Missed connections → Stockouts and late shipments Crowded runways → Excess inventory and tied-up working capital Major delays → Production bottlenecks and inefficiencies Just as air traffic control ensures planes take off, land, and taxi efficiently, Planning Optimization coordinates supply chain movements, keeping materials, production, and deliveries aligned. Operations scheduling provides a high-level view—like monitoring all flights on a radar. Job scheduling gets into the details, ensuring each plane has a clear path. Time fences act like air traffic rules, controlling when and how flights are scheduled to avoid congestion. With Planning Optimization guiding the supply chain, everything stays in sync—materials arrive on time, production runs smoothly, and customers get what they need, when they need it. Core Planning Methods in D365 At the heart of every efficient airport is a control tower that coordinates the movement of aircraft—balancing the big picture of airspace with the detailed instructions needed for each takeoff and landing. In D365 Planning Optimization, core planning methods function much the same way, managing both the high-level flow of operations and the fine-grained details of execution. Whether you’re looking at operations scheduling to understand the broader capacity landscape or job scheduling to direct specific production tasks, these tools give you the visibility and control needed to keep your supply chain running smoothly and on time. Operations Scheduling vs. Job Scheduling Operations scheduling provides a high-level production estimate without breaking down individual tasks. Useful for long-term capacity planning and understanding overall production flow. Job scheduling is a more detailed scheduling method, where each operation is divided into individual jobs. It considers capacity constraints and shop floor scheduling for short-term execution. Key Planning Time Fences Time fences control how far into the future Planning Optimization calculates requirements. Configuring them correctly is crucial for balancing efficiency and responsiveness. Coverage time fence defines how far ahead demand should be considered for planning. Freeze time fence prevents changes to planned orders within a set period, ensuring stability. Firming time fence automatically converts planned orders into actual purchase or production orders. Forecast plan time fence controls how far into the future forecasted demand influences planning. Capacity time fence ensures production scheduling considers resource constraints and limits. Action message time fence determines the period for generating rescheduling suggestions. Advanced Planning Controls Much like the sophisticated systems used by air traffic control to anticipate weather disruptions, manage flight sequencing, and calculate delays, D365’s advanced planning controls provide the precision needed to optimize your supply chain under real-world conditions. These tools help fine-tune order timing, streamline production flows, and ensure schedules remain realistic—even when disruptions occur. From adjusting for lead times with dynamic buffers to sequencing production orders for efficiency, these advanced settings give planners the ability to respond quickly and intelligently—keeping operations aligned and preventing turbulence across the business. Positive and Negative Days: Optimizing Order Timing Positive days defines how far into the future on-hand inventory can be used to fulfill demand, preventing unnecessary orders. Negative days determines how long the system should wait before creating a new order when supply is delayed. Dynamic positive and negative days adjust automatically based on item lead times, optimizing order timing without manual intervention. Sequencing: Smart Production Order Arrangement Enables planned orders to be arranged based on attributes such as color, size, or packaging. Reduces changeovers, improving production efficiency. Calculated Delays: Ensuring Feasible Production Dates Detects and reports possible order delays, ensuring that production and purchase schedules are based on realistic fulfillment timelines. Requisitions and Demand Planning Planning Optimization can automatically create planned orders for approved requisition demand, ensuring seamless replenishment without manual intervention. Why Planning Optimization Matters Shifting from a reactive supply chain to a proactive, optimized operation is essential for driving efficiency and financial performance. With D365 Planning Optimization, businesses can achieve significant operation improvements: Reduce stockouts and excess inventory, improving working capital efficiency Optimize production schedules by aligning with actual capacity and supplier lead times Enhance supply chain resilience by adjusting dynamically to disruptions and demand shifts Automate aspects of planning processes, reducing manual effort and improving accuracy Greater efficiency creates capacity to drive growth—but it also enables smarter, faster decision-making across the organization. When your planning is intelligent and responsive, your business is positioned to seize opportunities, minimize risk, and consistently deliver for customers. Bringing Blue Skies to Your Supply Chain Just as an air traffic control tower brings order to the complex, fast-moving environment of an airport, Planning Optimization brings clarity and coordination to your supply chain. With D365 Planning Optimization, your supply chain operates like a well-orchestrated airport, where: Materials, production, and deliveries flow seamlessly Bottlenecks are avoided, and disruptions are minimized … Read more