Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 9 - MANAGING INVENTORY IN THE SUPPLY CHAIN
- Consumer packaged goods (CGP) Firms
- Is part of the distribution channels face a special challenge in keeping inventories
at acceptable levels because of the difficulty of forecasting demand and the
increasing expectations from customers concerning product availability.
- CPFR - Collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishtags.
- Batching economies or Cycle stocks
- Arise from 3 sources
- Procurement
- Production
- Transportation
- The motor carrier saves money in pick-up, handling
and delivery costs with the truckload shipment and
these are reflected in a lower rate or price to the
shipper.
- Larger purchased volumes result in lower
prices per unit and vice versa
- Safety stock
- It is much more complex and challenging to
manage because it is redundant inventory
- Inventory & information
- The information revolution is because now the technology
is available to transmit and receive timely and accurate
information between trading partners.
- Inventory value is calculated by multiplying the
number of units in the container times the
manufactured cost of each item divided by 365.
- The value of the inventory is considered an annual valuation.
- Inventory cost
- It is important for 3 reasons
- 1. Inventory costs represent a significant
component of logistics costs in many
organizations
- 2. The inventory levels that an organization maintains at
nodes in its logistics network will affect the level of
service that the org can offer.
- 3. Cost trade off decisions in logistics frequently
depend on and ultimately impact inventory
carrying costs.
- Inventory carrying cost
- Capital cost
- Called too like interest or opportunity cost.
- Inventory service cost
- Inventory risk cost
- Calculating the cost of carrying inventory
- Time/In transit and work in process stock
- The longer the time period, the higher the cost
- The time associated with transportation and with the
manufacture or assembly of a complex product are in
a inventory cost with the time period.
- The rates or prices charged by
carriers in the different modes
reflect these differences in service.
- EDI - Electronic data interchange
- WIP - Work in process
- WIP inventories are associated with manufacturing.
- Seasonal stocks
- It's gonna be
happen with the
RM or the demand
for finished
product
- Seasonality can affect transportation, like
- When the rivers and lakes freeze during the
winter, which might interrupt the shipment
- ABC
- Uses a mix of motor carrier,
railroad and ocean carriers to
complete this move
- A items are considered to be the most important
- B items being of lesser importance
- C items being the least important
- Anticipatory
Stocks
- One of the most popular solution is to make an
analysis, it should be undertaken to assess the risk,
probability and cost of inventory
- The importance of inventory
in other functional areas
- 1. Marketing - Is to identify, create and help
satisfy demand for an organization's products
or service
- 2. Manufacturing - Manufacturing operations are
measured in many organizations, by how efficiently
they can produce each unit of output
- 3. Finance - Inventories impact both
the incomes statement and balance
sheet of an organization.
- WACC - Weighted average cost of capital
- WACC is the weighted average percent of debt service of all external sources of funding, including both equity and debt
- Ordering and set up cost
- Ordering cost
- Set up cost
- Expected stock out cost
- Safety stock
- Pull vs Push
- The pull approach
relies on customer
orders to move
product through a
logistics system, while
the push approach
uses inventory
replenishment
techniques in
anticipation os
demand to move
products
- Simple EOQ model
- It has 8 points (page 317)
- The simple EOQ
model considers only
two basic types of
cost: inventory
carrying and
ordering cost
- Min - max inventory
management
approach
- This applies when demand
might be larger and when
the amount on hand might
fall below the reorder point
before the organization
initiates a replenishment
order
- Uncertainty of demand
- Uncertainty demand and lead
time length
- How much product customers will demand during the lead time. If demand and lead time
are constant and known, calculatiing the reorder poitn would be easy.
- Fixed order interval approach
- Fixed period or fixed period approach involves ordering inventory at fixed or regular intervals.
- If demand & lead time are constant and known in advance,
then an organizations using the fixed order interval
approach will periodically recorder exactly the same amount
of inventory.
- Materials requirements planning
- Master production schedule (MPS)
- Bill of materials file (BOM)
- Inventory status file (ISF)
- MRP program
- Outputs and reports
- 80 20 RULE
- Vilfredo Pareto, suggested that many
situations were dominated by a relatively
few vital elements and that the relative
characteristics of members of a population
were not uniform
- Exmaple
- An university might find that
20 percent of its courses
generates 80 percent of its
student credit hours
- Quadrant model
- It is used to classify raw materials, parts or components for a
manufacturing firms, the quadrant model can also be used
to classify finished goods inventories using value and risk to
the firm as the criteria.
- The Square root rule
- Helps yo determine the excent to which
inventories might be reduced through such a
consolidation strategy
- If all of total customer demand remains the same, this estimates the excent to which
aggregate inventory need will change as an organization increases or decreases the number
of stocking locations