Title: Chapter 11 Inventory Management
1Chapter 11 Inventory Management
- Definition, objectives, historical evolution,
EOQ, service levels, models
2What Is Inventory?
- Material owned for use in product or as operating
supply - Has value (usually)
- Need for product or to support production
- Other?
3Inventory Types - 1
- Raw Material (RM) purchased
- true raw material
- Component parts
- Work-in-process (WIP) manufactured in-house
- Assemblies
- Sub-assemblies
- Fabricated parts
4Inventory Types - 2
- Finished Goods (FGI)
- Completed products
- Raw Materials in Process (RIP)
- Found in lean operations (JIT) environments
- Combines RM and WIP
- Operating supplies
- Goods in transit
5Major Objectives
- Never have a stockout
- Customer dissatisfaction
- Production disruption
- Never carry excess inventory
- Inventory is an asset but it is not free
- In other words walk a tightrope!
6Inventory Related Costs
- Carrying costs
- Obvious
- Capital
- Holding
- Semi-obvious
- Obsolescence
- Inventory management
- Hidden
- Idle stock
- Scrap and rework
- Next slide
- Ordering costs
- People
- Purchasing staff
- Receiving
- Inspection
- Order transmission
- Purchasing supplies
- Occupancy
- Purchasing
- Receiving
7Holding costs Stock Related
- Personnel
- Equipment
- Occupancy (rent and utilities)
- Interest
- Insurance
- Taxes
- Security
- Shrinkage and damage
8Historical Evolution of I/C - 1
- Record keeping
- Answer 2 questions
- When to order
- How much to order
- When?
- Sawtooth diagram ROP (see next slide)
- ROP d X LT
9Sawtooth diagram ROP
10ROP Limitations
- Assumes demand is known and linear
- Relies on instantaneous replenishment when
inventory reaches zero - Assumes lead time is known and constant
- Has no relationship to future usage
- Treats each item independently
- Encourages safety stock
11Historical Evolution of I/C - 2
- How Much?
- Cost of inventory EOQ
- Balance carrying (holding) and ordering costs
- EOQ square root of 2DS/IC
- Variations
- Multiple delivery (manufacturing EMQ or EPQ)
- Quantity discounts
12EOQ Limitations
- Assumes ordering costs are accurately known
- Assumes carrying costs are accurately known
- Results in always carrying a certain amount of
inventory - Focuses on mechanics, not basics
- No emphasis on changing costs
13Additional ordering models
- Fixed-order interval
- Frequency is set
- Quantity varies with each order
- Single-period model
- One-time order
- Perishables, refurbishing contracts
- Alternative ABC approach (Pareto!)
- Based on dollar usage over a fixed period
- Order A often, C rarely, B in between
14ABC Classification System
Classifying inventory according to some measure
of importance and allocating control efforts
accordingly. A - very important B - mod.
important C - least important
15Inventory Counting Systems
- Periodic
- Full physical (wall-to-wall)
- Two bin
- Bulk and shelf
- Stockroom minimum (SRM)
- Perpetual
- Transaction recording and balance maintenance
- Historical evolution
- Cycle counting (using ABC)
16Inventory Metrics
- Inventory Turnover
- T CGS
- AI
- Expected Annual Shortages
- E(N) E(n) x D
- Q
- Service Level
- SLANNUAL 1 - (E(N)/D)