Operations Management: William J. Stevenson
Operations Management: William J. Stevenson
Operations Management
William J. Stevenson
8th edition
11-2 Inventory Management
CHAPTER
11
Inventory
Management
A Dependent Demand
B(4) C(2)
Types of Inventories
Raw materials & purchased parts
Partially completed goods called
work in progress
Finished-goods inventories
(manufacturing firms)
or merchandise
(retail stores)
11-5 Inventory Management
Functions of Inventory
214800 232087768
11-14 Inventory Management
Low C
Few Many
Number of Items
11-16 Inventory Management
ABC Classification
A items
15-20% of items that account for 75-80% of
annual inventory value
B items
30-40% of items that account for 15% of
annual inventory value
C items
40-50% of items that account for 10-15% of
annual inventory value
11-17 Inventory Management
ABC Classification
11-18 Inventory Management
Cycle Counting
Reorder
point
Time
Receive Place Receive Place Receive
order order order order order
Lead time
11-21 Inventory Management
Reorder
point
Time
Receive Place Receive Place Receive
order order order order order
Lead time
11-25 Inventory Management
Carrying Cost
Annual carrying cost is computed by multiplying the
average amount of inventory on hand by the cost to
carry one unit for one year.
Carrying cost
Q
H
Annual cost
Ordering cost
Annual ordering cost will decrease as order size
increases because the larger the order size, the fewer
orders are needed.
Ordering cost
Annual cost
D
S
Q
Total Cost
Annual Annual
Total cost = carrying + ordering
cost cost
Q + DS
TC = H
2 Q
11-30 Inventory Management
Q D
TC H S
Annual Cost
2 Q
Carrying Costs
Ordering Costs
Order Quantity
QO (optimal order quantity)
(Q)
11-31 Inventory Management
Example 1
A tyre distributor expects to sell 9,600 tyres next
year. Annual carrying cost is RM16 per tyre and
ordering cost is RM75. The distributor operates
288 days per year.
a) What is the EOQ?
Example 1
D = 9,600 tyres per year
H = RM16 per unit per year
S = RM75
2 DS 2(9,600)(75)
a ) Q 300 tyres
H 16
Example 2
Taiko Manufacturing assembles security monitors.
It purchases 3,600 CRT a year at $65 each.
Ordering costs are $31 and annual carrying costs
are 20% of purchase price.
a) Compute EOQ
b) Total annual cost.
11-36 Inventory Management
Example 2
D = 3,600 CRT per year
S = $31
H = 0.20($65) = $13
2 DS 2(3,600)(31)
a ) Q 131 CRT
H 13
b) Total annual cost: Q H D
S
131
(13)
3,600
(31)
2 Q 2 131
$1,704
11-37 Inventory Management
No quantity discounts
11-39 Inventory Management
Run size, Qo
Cumulative
production
Maximum
inventory,
Imax
Amount on
hand
Time
EOQ with incremental inventory replenishment
11-40 Inventory Management
Example 3
A toy manufacturer uses 48,000 rubber wheels per year.
The firm makes its own wheels, which it can produce at
a rate of 800 per day. The carrying cost is $1 per wheel
a year. Setup cost is $45. The firm operates 240 days
per year. Determine the:
a) Optimal run size
b) Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup
c) Cycle time for the optimal run size
d) Run time
11-42 Inventory Management
Example 3
D = 48,000 wheels per year
H = $1 per wheel per year
S = $45
p =800 wheels per day
u = 48,000 wheels per 240 days, or 200
wheels per day.
2 DS p 2(48,000)(45) 800
a) Q 2,400 wheels
H p u 1 800 200
b) TCmin = I max D
H S
2 Q
Q 2400
I max ( p u ) (800 200)
p 800
1,800 wheels
1800 48000
TC ($1) ($45) $1,800
2 2400
11-43 Inventory Management
Example 3
Q 2400 wheels
c) Cycle time
u 200 wheels per day
12 days
A run of wheels will be made every 12 days
Q 2400 wheels
d ) Run time
p 800 wheels per day
3 days
Each run requires 3 days to complete
11-44 Inventory Management
Quantity Discounts
Quantity discounts are price reductions for large orders
offered to customers to induce them to buy in large
quantities. For example:
1 to 44 $2.00
45 to 69 1.70
70 or more 1.40
11-45 Inventory Management
Q + DS + PD
TC = H
2 Q
11-46 Inventory Management
TC without PD
PD
0 EOQ Quantity
11-47 Inventory Management
TCa
Total Cost
TCb
Decreasing
TCc Price
CC a,b,c
OC
EOQ Quantity
11-48 Inventory Management
QUANTITY PRICE
H = $15
1 - 49 $1,400 S = $190 per computer
50 - 89 1,100 D = 200 units
90+ 900
11-49 Inventory Management
Safety Stock
Figure 11.12
Quantity
Expected demand
during lead time
ROP
Fixed-Order-Interval Model
Fixed-Interval Benefits
Fixed-Interval Disadvantages
Operations Strategy
Wise strategy
Reduce lot sizes
Reduce safety stock