What this page is for
This is the configuration screen for data alerts — where you decide which alerts you want and how loudly they speak. It is separate from the Data alerts view, which is the list of alerts that have actually fired. Here you set the rules; there you read the results. For each alert you do two things: switch it on or off, and mark it Information or Critical. Your changes take effect on the next data sync, so an alert you turn on shows up once fresh data comes in. This page has no numeric thresholds. It only enables alerts and sets their severity. If you’re looking to set sales-deviation thresholds — how far actual sales can drift from the forecast before an alert triggers — those live separately in the Baseline forecast area, not here.What you can set
| Setting | What it means |
|---|---|
| On / off | Whether the alert is active. Off means it never fires. |
| Severity | Information (worth noting) or Critical (needs attention). Severity only changes how the alert is flagged — it does not change what triggers it. |
| Reset settings | A button that restores every alert to its default on/off and severity. |
The alert catalog
Alerts are organized into groups so you can find related ones together:| Group | Example alerts |
|---|---|
| Network alerts | A warehouse with no incoming connection, so nothing can replenish it. |
| Product “invisible assets” alerts | A product with no safety stock set, so it has no buffer to defend. |
| Product lifecycle / setup alerts | A product with no assignee, or missing key setup before it can be planned. |
| Order-risk alerts | An order at risk of arriving late. |
How it affects planning
These settings shape your signal-to-noise. Turning an alert on surfaces a class of data problems you want to catch; turning it off silences noise you’ve decided not to chase. Severity helps you triage — mark the ones that can stop the plan as Critical and the rest as Information, so the Data alerts view sorts the urgent from the merely informative.Step by step: tune your alerts
- Scan the catalog and turn off any alert you don’t want to act on.
- Turn on the checks that matter for your process (for example, products with no safety stock).
- Set each active alert’s severity to Information or Critical.
- Wait for the next data sync — your changes apply then.
- Review what fired in the Data alerts view.
Example
Your team keeps missing warehouses that can’t be replenished. You turn the warehouse with no incoming connection alert on and mark it Critical. You also switch the product with no assignee alert on but leave it Information, since it’s a cleanup task rather than a blocker. After the next sync, both appear in the alerts view, with the critical one flagged for attention.Note: If you ever lose track of what you’ve changed, Reset settings puts every alert back to its default. To confirm your data is even flowing in, check Integrations.