Reviewing the contract information

In the detail view of the Shipment Schedules, the Planning Schedules, or the Plans pages, internal contract information of the customer is displayed.

To review the contract information:

  1. Select Release Management > Plans.
  2. Click the Drill down button of an active plan.
  3. Review the contract information:
    Customer
    The customer of the contract line. The customer is an arbitrary set of characters that is used to uniquely identify a customer in an accounting entity. The customer is taken from the ERP system.
    Customer Name
    The customer name of the contract line.
    Ship To
    The ship to of the contract line. This field indicates the location code that is used with the ship to location to identify where the goods are shipped.
    LSP Processing
    This field displays No LSP when the customer is supplied directly. INTERNAL is displayed when the shipments to the customer are sent by an internal logistics service provider (LSP). EXTERNAL is shown when an external LSP is involved.
    Internal Item
    The internal item identifier of the contract line that is used by the supplier.
    Customer Item
    The item identifier of the contract line that is used by the customer.
    Ship To Location
    The ship to location of the contract line at which the customer wants to receive a shipment.
    Plan ID
    The plan ID of the plan that is assigned to the contract line. The plan ID is automatically created by Release Management.
    Item Description
    The internal item description of the contract line.
    UOM
    The unit of measure of the contract line. A standard quantity used to count, divide, or describe an object or objects.
    Location
    This field shows the code that identifies the accounting entity location.
    Accounting Entity
    A corporation or a subset of a corporation that is independent in regard to one or more operational functions or accounting functions. An accounting entity produces a P&L and balance sheet from a complete, balanced set of transactions, and is often a legal entity. An accounting entity is defined within a tenant and can contain locations.