Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 1 - Introduction
1
Course Outline
¨ Introduction to Inventory
¨ Replenishment systems for single-item inventory:
¨ Order Quantities when demand is approximate level
¨ Lot Sizing for Individual items with time-varying demand.
¨ Individual items with probabilistic demand
¨ Special classes of Items:
¨ Managing the most important inventories
¨ Managing routine inventories
¨ Style goods and perishable items
¨ Multiple items and multiple locations
¨ Coordinated replenishments at a single stocking point
¨ SCM and Multi-echelon Inventories
Chapter 1: Introduction
¨ Definitions
¨ Types of Inventory
¨ Functions of Inventory
¨ Introduction to Inventory Control
¨ ABC Analysis
¨ Inventory Accuracy and Cycle Counting
¨ Inventory System
¨ General Framework for Inventory Model
1. Definitions
Inventory
¨ Stock of physical goods held at a specific location at a specific
time
¨ It exists because demand and supply cannot be matched for
physical and economic reasons.
Stock Keeping Units (SKU’s)
¨ Each distinct item (type of product) in the inventory at a location
Serviceability / Service level high if manages good inventory
¨ Probability of stock out
2. Types of Inventory
¨ Transaction Stocks
¨ Organization Stocks
¨ Excess Stocks
Transaction Stocks
¨ Stock to support the transformation, movement, and sales
operations of the firm / whenever we move the stock
¨ Active work-in-process (WIP) stocks constitute a large part of
transaction stock
¨ Pipeline or transportation inventories are inventory in transit
¨ Transaction stock cannot be easily reduced
Organization Stocks
¨ Safety Stock is an organization stock to buffer against
uncertainty
¨ Anticipation Inventory or leveling inventory is used whenever
it is cheaper to hold stock than to alter short-term production
capacity
Excess Stocks / over stocks
¨ Has no purpose. It is an indication of poor planning/execution
of system operation
¨ Stock-out = under-stock
General Types of Inventory
Raw material
¨ Purchased but not processed
Work-in-process
¨ Undergone some change but not completed
¨ A function of cycle time for a product
Maintenance/repair/operating (MRO)
¨ Necessary to keep machinery and processes productive
Finished goods
¨ Completed product awaiting shipment
3. Functions of Inventory
¨ To decouple or separate various parts of the
production process
¨ To protect/buffer the firm from fluctuations in
demand
¨ To take advantage of quantity discounts
¨ To hedge against inflation
Levels of Inventory
¨ Inventory may occur at various levels or echelons within the
company. An echelon, level, or stage is a stock point that is
under control of the company.
¨ Raw material, work in process, high level components, and
finished products belong to different echelons
Reasons for Carrying Inventories
1. To provide service
¨ finished good inventory to meet demand and keep
customers happy
¨ work-in-progress inventory to increase flexibility by
decoupling production stages and keep machines
running
¨ raw material inventory keeps production moving
¨ protection against uncertainty
Reasons for Carrying Inventories
2. To save money
¨ buying in large quantities allows spreading of fixed costs
such as ordering costs and obtaining quantity discounts.
¨ stocking of seasonal items allow production smoothing or
work-load balancing.
4. Introduction to Inventory Control
¨ Supply Chain Management: control of the material
flow from supplier to customers is a crucial
problem
¨ Total investment in inventories is ENORMOUS
¨ Huge potential for improvement to cut cost, to gain
competitive advantage
⇒ Importance of Inventory Management
Introduction to Inventory Control: goals
¨ Balancing conflicting goals of Finance, Production and
Marketing
¨ Finance: keep stocks low to free up investment capital
¨ Purchasing: order large batches to get volume discounts,
secure their position / customer of purchasing is production
¨ Production: long production runs to avoid time-consuming
setups and have a large raw material inventory to avoid
production stoppages
¨ Marketing: have high stock of finished goods to avoid
stockouts
⇒ Inventory Models seek to find the best balance
between these goals.
Inventory Planning and Control
¨ Not all customers and not all SKU’s are equally important.
¨ Usually, 20% of the SKU’s will account for 80% of the value of the
inventory
¨ Usually, the ABC system picks 15% to 20% of the items, representing 80%
of the dollar value to be A items.
¨ About the next 30% to 40% of the items form a B category, account for
15% of the total value
¨ The rest are C items, account for about 5% of the total value
Example
Total Annual
Annual Usage Annual Usage
Item Unit Cost Percentage
(Units) (Cost)
Usage
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-- G E C M P H A I B S Q D
Controls for A Items
¨ Frequent, perhaps monthly, cycle counting with tight
tolerances on accuracy
¨ Daily updating of records
¨ Frequent review of demand requirements, order quantities,
and safety stock; usually resulting in relatively small order
quantities
¨ Close follow-up and expediting to reduce lead time
Controls for B Items
¨ Similar to controls for A items with most control activities
taking place less frequently
Controls for C Items
¨ Basic rule is to have them simple records or no records;
perhaps use a periodic review of physical inventory
¨ Large order quantity and safety stock
¨ Store in area readily available to production workers or order
fillers
¨ Count items infrequently with scale accuracy acceptable
6. Inventory Accuracy and Cycle
Counting
¨ Inventory accuracy refers to how well the inventory records
agree with physical count.
¨ Tolerance refers to the acceptable errors of inventory
records.
¨ Cycle Counting is a physical inventory- taking technique in
which inventory is counted on a frequent basis rather than
once or twice a year.
7. Inventory System
¨ Objective is to keep the total cost associated with the system
to a minimum
Important Issues
¨ Inventory Transaction
¨ Inventory Accuracy
¨ Physical Control
¨ Cycle Counting
¨ Inventory Valuations
Independent vs. Dependent Demand
Intermittent-Time
Continuous Decisions
One-Time Decisions
Decisions Continuous Review Periodic Review
(when we System Systems
introduce
The new product) EOQ, EPQ EOQ
Optional
Two Bins
Replenishment
Structure of timing decisions