When a thunderstorm line appears or a local team clinches victory, hours matter more than weeks. Lightweight state-space and gradient approaches ingest fresh transactions and micro-events to adjust expectations before missed sales pile up. These models emphasize speed, robustness, and graceful degradation when feeds hiccup. Associates receive precise, time-bounded nudges rather than vague alarms. The practical outcome is timely replenishment that feels human-aware, catching surges early without exhausting everyone during calm stretches.
Point forecasts soothe spreadsheets but mislead trucks. By generating quantile forecasts, we size safety stock to service levels, not hopes. This acknowledges uncertainty honestly, prioritizes scarce space, and communicates risk clearly to merchandising and suppliers. Decision makers balance costs against fill-rate with transparent tradeoffs instead of magic. Over time, prediction intervals tighten as feedback loops mature, yielding steadier turns, fewer expedites, and quieter weekends. The shelf becomes a promise, not a gamble dressed as certainty.