← ccPlanning Academy · Capacity planning track

What capacity planning is

Free visual lesson · about 5 minutes · short quiz at the end

ccPlanning academy · capacity planning

What capacity planning is

The long game: how many people you’ll need, and how you’ll get them.

The big idea

Forecasting predicts demand. Capacity planning answers it with people.

Scheduling and real-time work in days and weeks. Capacity planning looks months and quarters ahead: do we have — or can we hire — enough trained people to meet the demand we’re forecasting? It’s the bridge between the forecast and the headcount budget.

The three horizons

Strategic, tactical, operational.

Strategic
1–3 yrs: budget, sites, model
Tactical
3–12 mths: hiring plan
Operational
weeks: schedules, RTM

Capacity planning owns the top two. Each horizon hands constraints down to the next.

Why it’s a distinct discipline

People can’t be summoned on the day.

You can re-time a break in seconds, but a new agent takes weeks to recruit and months to become fully productive. Because supply has a long lead time, the decision to staff for next quarter has to be made this quarter. Get the long view wrong and no amount of clever scheduling can rescue it.

What it produces

A rolling headcount and hiring plan.

The output isn’t an interval forecast — it’s a month-by-month view of required heads vs available heads, the gaps, and the recruitment, training and attrition actions needed to close them. It’s the document finance and HR plan the year around.

Where planners add the most value

This is the seat at the top table.

Capacity planning is where workforce planning meets budgets, hiring and strategy — the conversations that decide headcount and money. Doing it well is how a planning function stops being a back-office calculator and becomes a partner to the business.

Why the long lead time bites

You need them in Q4 — so you hire in Q2

Say Q4 demand needs 120 trained heads and you have 110 today. With ~2% monthly attrition you’re also losing people while you grow, and a new starter takes weeks to recruit plus months to ramp.

Work backwards and the hire-by date is months before the demand arrives. Capacity planning exists to find that date before it’s behind you.

The takeaway

The strategic layer above the day-to-day.

Capacity planning turns long-range demand into a headcount and hiring plan, across strategic and tactical horizons. Because people take time to recruit and ramp, it’s where the big, early, expensive decisions get made — the rest of this track is how to make them well.

Now test yourself ↓

1 / 7

Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.

In depth: the long game behind the day-to-day

Forecasting predicts demand; capacity planning is the discipline that answers it with people. Where scheduling and real-time management work in days and weeks, capacity planning looks months and quarters ahead and asks a single hard question: do we have — or can we hire and train in time — enough productive people to meet the demand we’re forecasting? It’s the bridge between the forecast and the headcount budget, and it’s where the biggest, earliest and most expensive decisions in the whole operation get made.

Three horizons, two of them yours

Planning happens on three timescales. The strategic horizon (one to three years) sets budgets, sites and the operating model. The tactical horizon (three to twelve months) turns that into a hiring plan. The operational horizon (weeks) is schedules and real-time. Capacity planning owns the top two, and each horizon hands constraints down to the next — get the strategic numbers wrong and no amount of clever scheduling at the bottom can rescue them.

Why it’s a distinct job

The reason capacity planning can’t just be folded into forecasting is lead time. You can re-time a break in seconds, but a new agent takes weeks to recruit and months to reach full productivity, so the decision to staff for next quarter has to be made this quarter. The output isn’t an interval forecast — it’s a rolling, month-by-month view of required heads versus available heads, the gaps between them, and the recruitment, training and attrition actions needed to close those gaps. That document is what finance and HR plan the year around, which is exactly why doing it well is how a planning function earns its seat at the top table.

The principle to remember: capacity planning turns long-range demand into a headcount and hiring plan across the strategic and tactical horizons. Because people take time to recruit and ramp, the expensive decisions have to be made early — the rest of this track is how to make them well.

Quick quiz

Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.

1. What does capacity planning do that operational forecasting doesn’t?

Forecasting predicts demand; capacity planning answers it with people over a long horizon.

2. Which horizons does capacity planning own?

It owns the top two horizons; scheduling and real-time own the operational one.

3. Why is capacity planning a distinct discipline?

Supply has a long lead time — you can’t summon trained agents on the day.

4. What does capacity planning produce?

The output is a headcount and hiring plan finance and HR work to all year.

5. Why is capacity planning a high-value seat for planners?

Doing it well turns a planning function from back-office calculator into a business partner.