Title: Purposes of Inventory
1Purposes of Inventory
- 1. To maintain independence of operations.
- 2. To meet variation in product demand.
- 3. To allow flexibility in production scheduling.
- 4. To provide a safeguard for variation in raw
material delivery time. - 5. To take advantage of economic purchase-order
size.
2Basic Fixed-Order Quantity Model and Reorder
Point Behavior
Exhibit 13.3
3Inventory Costs
- Holding (or carrying) costs.
- Costs for storage, handling, insurance, etc.
- Setup (or production change) costs.
- Costs for arranging specific equipment setups,
etc. - Ordering costs.
- Costs of someone placing an order, etc.
- Shortage costs.
- Costs of canceling an order, etc.
4Cost Minimization Goal
By adding the item, holding, and ordering costs
together, we determine the total cost curve,
which in turn is used to find the Qopt inventory
order point that minimizes total costs.
C O S T
Holding Costs
Annual Cost of Items (DC)
Ordering Costs
QOPT
Order Quantity (Q)
5Basic Fixed-Order Quantity (EOQ) Model Formula
TC Total annual cost D Demand C
Cost per unit Q Order quantity S
Cost of placing an order or setup cost R
Reorder point L Lead time H Annual
holding and storage cost per unit of
inventory
6Fixed-Order Quantity Model with Safety Stock
Formula
R Average demand during lead time Safety
stock
7Determining the Value of sL
- The standard deviation of a sequence of random
events equals the square root of the sum of the
variances.
8ABC Classification System
- Items kept in inventory are not of equal
importance in terms of - dollars invested
- profit potential
- sales or usage volume
- stock-out penalties
60
of Value
A
30
B
0
C
30
of Use
60
So, identify inventory items based on percentage
of total dollar value, where A items are
roughly top 80 , B items as next 15 , and the
lower 5 are the C items.
9Schedule Performance Measures
- Meeting due dates of customers or downstream
operations. - Minimizing the flow time (the time a job spends
in the process). - Minimizing work-in-process inventory.
- Minimizing idle time of machines or workers.
10Principles of Work Center Scheduling
- 1. There is a direct equivalence between work
flow and cash flow. - 2. The effectiveness of any job shop should be
measured by speed of flow through the shop. - 3. Schedule jobs as a string, with process steps
back-to-back. - 4. A job once started should not be interrupted.
11Principles of Job Shop Scheduling (Continued)
- 5. Speed of flow is most efficiently achieved by
focusing on bottleneck work centers and jobs. - 6. Reschedule every day.
- 7. Obtain feedback each day on jobs that are not
completed at each work center. - 8. Match work center input information to what
the worker can actually do.
12Principles of Job Shop Scheduling (Continued)
- 9. When seeking improvement in output, look for
incompatibility between engineering design and
process execution. - 10. Certainty of standards, routings, and so
forth is not possible in a job shop, but always
work towards achieving it.
13Just-In-Time (JIT)Defined
- JIT an integrated set of activities designed to
achieve high-volume production using minimal
inventories (RM, WIP, FG). - JIT involves
- the elimination of waste in production effort.
- the timing of production resources (e.g., parts
arrive at the next workstation just in time).
14JIT Demand-Pull Logic
Customers
15Minimizing Waste Inventory Hides Problems
16Kanban
- Japanese word for card
- Pronounced kahn-bahn (not can-ban)
- Authorizes production from downstream operations
- Pulls material through plant
- May be a card, flag, verbal signal etc.
- Used often with fixed-size containers
- Add or remove containers to change production rate
17Minimizing Waste Kanban Production Control
Systems
Exhibit 10.6
Withdrawal kanban
Storage Part A
Storage Part A
Machine Center
Assembly Line
Material Flow Card (signal) Flow
Production kanban
18Characteristics of JIT VendorPartnerships
- Few, nearby suppliers
- Long-term contract agreements
- Steady supply rate
- Frequent deliveries in small lots
- Buyer helps suppliers meet quality
- Suppliers use process control charts
- Buyer schedules inbound freight
19Respect for People
- Level payrolls
- Cooperative employee unions
- Subcontractor networks
- Bottom-round management style
- Quality circles (Small group involvement
activities)
20JIT Implementation Issues
- Level the Facility Load
- Eliminate Unnecessary Activities
- Reorganize Physical Configuration
- Introduce Demand-Pull Scheduling
- Develop Supplier Networks
21Goldratts Rules of Production Scheduling
- Do not balance capacity balance the flow.
- The level utilization of a nonbottleneck resource
is not determined by its own potential but by
some other constraint in the system. - Utilization and activation of a resource are not
the same. - An hour lost at a bottleneck is an hour lost for
the entire system. - An hour saved at a nonbottleneck is a mirage.
22Goldratts Rules of Production Scheduling
(Continued)
- Bottlenecks govern both throughput and inventory
in the system. - Transfer batch may not and many times should not
be equal to the process batch. - A process batch should be variable both along its
route and in time. - Priorities can be set only by examining the
systems constraints. Lead time is a derivative
of the schedule.
23Goldratts Theory of Constraints (TOC)
- Identify the system constraints.
- Decide how to exploit the system constraints.
- Subordinate everything else to that decision.
- Elevate the system constraints.
- If, in the previous steps, the constraints have
been broken, go back to Step 1, but do not let
inertia become the system constraint.
24Saving Time
What are the consequences of saving time at each
process?
Rule Bottlenecks govern both throughput and
inventory in the system. Rule An hour lost at
a bottleneck is an hour lost for the entire
system. Rule An hour saved at a nonbottleneck
is a mirage.
25Drum, Buffer, Rope
Exhibit 17.9
26Quality Implications of synchronous manufacturing
- More tolerant than JIT systems
- Excess capacity throughout system.
- Except for the bottleneck
- Quality control needed before bottleneck.
27Inventory Cost MeasurementDollar Days
- Dollar Days is a measurement of the value of
inventory and the time it stays within an area.
28Benefits from Dollar Day Measurement
- Marketing
- Discourages holding large amounts of finished
goods inventory. - Purchasing
- Discourages placing large purchase orders that on
the surface appear to take advantage of quantity
discounts. - Manufacturing
- Discourage large work in process and producing
earlier than needed.
29Comparing Synchronous Manufacturing to MRP
- MRP uses backward scheduling.
- Synchronous manufacturing uses forward
scheduling.
30Comparing Synchronous Manufacturing to JIT
- JIT is limited to repetitive manufacturing
- JIT requires a stable production level
- JIT does not allow very much flexibility in the
products produced
31Comparing Synchronous Manufacturing to JIT
(Continued)
- JIT still requires work in process when used with
kanban so that there is "something to pull." - Vendors need to be located nearby because the
system depends on smaller, more frequent
deliveries.