According to www.supplychainbrain.com, sales and operations planning (S&OP) is shifting from a monthly alignment ritual to the central nervous system of the modern enterprise — yet many organizations remain hampered by fragmented data, inconsistent financial integration, and outdated tools.
The State of S&OP in 2026
Nic Sallis, VP of Operations, Konexial, Inc., observes that S&OP is now expected to serve as the central nervous system for the entire business. However, key realities continue to constrain its effectiveness:
- Fragmented data and disconnected systems prevent accurate, real-time views of demand, capacity, and supply risk
- Forecasting accuracy remains a persistent challenge amid increasingly volatile and unpredictable demand patterns
- Supply disruptions, transportation delays, labor constraints, and inventory swings have forced organizations to update plans more frequently than ever before
- Financial alignment is often inconsistent, resulting in planning processes that do not fully account for margin impacts or cost-to-serve trade-offs
- Technology adoption varies widely — some organizations use advanced analytics while others still rely heavily on spreadsheets
Toward Integrated, Intelligent Planning
To modernize S&OP, the source states organizations must progress toward a more integrated and intelligent planning framework. Foundational steps include:
- Establishing unified data models and connected planning environments — ensuring demand, supply, production, and financial data are accessible, consistent, and updated in real time
- Investing in advanced analytics and scenario-based planning to model disruptions, evaluate trade-offs, and prepare for multiple future states
- Strengthening cross-functional engagement — involving sales, supply chain, operations, procurement, finance, and even customer service continuously, not just monthly
- Transitioning from deterministic planning to dynamic, probabilistic forecasting to better reflect market uncertainty and quantify risk
- Ensuring financial integration so all planning decisions align with profitability goals and long-term business strategy
Operational Imperatives for Supply Chain Professionals
For practitioners, this evolution means moving beyond spreadsheet-driven consensus-building toward governed, standardized processes with clear roles, accountability measures, and decision rights. According to the report, process standardization and governance are critical to support faster, more coordinated responses across the organization. The outlook emphasizes that S&OP is shifting from static to continuous planning with real-time updates — and AI and machine learning will automate tasks, identify patterns, and recommend corrective actions, making cross-functional meetings more strategic.
“S&OP once served as a monthly meeting focused on aligning sales forecasts with production plans. Today, it is expected to serve as the central nervous system for the entire business.” — Nic Sallis, VP of Operations, Konexial, Inc.
This shift has direct implications for supply chain professionals: forecasting teams must now collaborate daily with finance on margin sensitivity; procurement leaders need shared visibility into constrained capacity scenarios; and logistics planners must co-develop transportation contingency plans within the same platform used for demand simulation. As S&OP extends beyond organizational boundaries, practitioners should also anticipate increased data-sharing expectations with key suppliers and customers — particularly where integrated inventory visibility or joint demand sensing is deployed. The source states that S&OP will seek methods of closer collaboration with stakeholders throughout the supply chain, reinforcing that end-to-end synchronization begins with internal unification.
Source: Supply Chain Brain
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










