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Ch15 - Inventory Systems For Independent Demand

MJ Operasi Produksi

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views

Ch15 - Inventory Systems For Independent Demand

MJ Operasi Produksi

Uploaded by

Yuli Purwati
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 27

Production

and Operations
Management: Eighth Edition

Manufacturing and
Services

PowerPoint Presentation for Chapter 15


Inventory Systems for Independent Demand
Chase
Aquilano
Jacobs
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Irwin/McGraw-Hill © ©The
The
McGraw-Hill
McGraw-Hill
Companies,
Companies,
Inc.,
Inc.,
1998
1998
Chapter 15
Inventory Systems for Independent Demand

 The Definition and Purpose of Inventory


 Inventory Costs
 Independent vs. Dependent Demand
 Basic Fixed Order Quantity Model
 Basic Fixed Time Period Model
 Miscellaneous Systems and Issues
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 2
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Inventory

 Definition--The stock of any item or resource


used in an organization
– Raw materials
– Finished products
– Component parts
– Supplies
– Work in process

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 3


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Purposes 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
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 4
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Inventory Costs

 Holding (or carrying) costs

 Setup (or production change) costs

 Ordering costs

 Shortage costs

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 5


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Independent vs. Dependent Demand
Independent Demand
(Demand not related to other items)

Dependent Demand
(Derived)

E(1)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 6


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Classifying Inventory Models

 Fixed-Order Quantity Models


– Event triggered

 Fixed-Time Period Models


– Time triggered

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 7


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Fixed-Order Quantity Models
Assumptions

 Demand for the product is constant and uniform


throughout the period

 Lead time (time from ordering to receipt) is


constant

 Price per unit of product is constant

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 8


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Fixed-Order Quantity Models
Assumptions

 Inventory holding cost is based on average


inventory

 Ordering or setup costs are constant

 All demands for the product will be satisfied (No


back orders are allowed)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 9


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
EOQ Model--Basic Fixed-Order
Exhibit
Exhibit15.3
15.3
Quantity Model

Number
of units
on hand Q Q Q

R
L L

Time
R = Reorder point
Q = Economic order quantity
L = Lead time
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 10
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Cost Minimization Goal

C
O Total Cost
S
T Holding
Costs
Annual Cost of
Items (DC)

Ordering Costs

QOPT
Order Quantity (Q)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 11


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Basic Fixed-Order Quantity Model
Annual Annual Annual
Total Annual Cost = Purchase + Ordering + Holding
Cost Cost Cost
TC Total annual cost
D Demand
C Cost per unit
D Q Q Order quantity
TC = DC + S + H
Q 2 S Cost of placing an order
or setup cost
R Reorder point
L Lead time
H Annual holding and storage
cost
Irwin/McGraw-Hill per© unit of inventory
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 12
Deriving the EOQ

 Using calculus, we take the derivative of the total


cost function and set the derivative (slope) equal
to zero
2D S 2(A nnual D em and)(O rder or Setup C ost)
Q O PT = =
H A nnual H olding C ost

_
R
e
or
de
rp
oi
nt
,R=
dL
_
d=a
v
er
ag
ed
a
il
yde
ma
nd
(c
o
ns
ta
nt
)
L
=Le
a
dt
ime
(c
on
s
ta
nt
)
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 13
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
EOQ Example

Annual Demand = 1,000 units


Days per year considered in average daily demand = 365
Cost to place an order = $10
Holding cost per unit per year = $2.50
Lead time = 7 days
Cost per unit = $15

Determine the economic order quantity and the reorder point.

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 14


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Solution

2DS 2(1,000 )(10)


Q OPT = = = 89.443 units or 90 units
H 2.50

Why do we round up?

1,000 units / year


d = = 2.74 units / day
365 days / year

_
Reorder point, R = d L = 2.74units / day (7days) = 19.18 or 20 units

When the inventory level reaches 20, order 90 units.


© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 15
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
In-Class Exercise

Annual Demand = 10,000 units


Days per year considered in average daily demand = 365
Cost to place an order = $10
Holding cost per unit per year = 10% of cost per unit
Lead time = 10 days
Cost per unit = $15

Determine the economic order quantity and the reorder point.

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 16


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Solution

2D S 2(10,000 )(10)
Q OPT = = = 365.148 units, or 366 u n its
H 1.50

1
0
,
00
0u
n
i
ts
/ye
a
r
d
= =2
7
.
39
7u
n
i
ts
/d
a
y
3
65
da
y
s/
ye
ar
_
R
=
d
L
=2
7
.
3
9
7u
ni
t
s
/d
a
y(
1
0
da
y
s
)=
2
7
3
.
9
7o
r
27
4
u
n
i
ts

When the inventory level reaches 274, order 366 units.


© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 17
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Fixed-Time Period Model

q = d(T + L) + Z  T+ L - I

Where:
q = quantitiy to be ordered
T = the number of days between reviews
L = lead time in days
d = forecast average daily demand
z = the number of standard deviations for a specified service level
 T+ L = standard deviation of demand over the review and lead time
I = current inventory level (includes items on order)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 18


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Determining the Value of Z

dT(1- P)
E(Z) =
 T+ L

where
E(Z) = expected number units short from a normalized
table where  = 1
P = service level desired
dT = demand during the review period where d is daily
demand and T is the number of days
 T+ L = standard deviation over the review period and the
lead time
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 19
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Determining the Value of sT+L

 
T+ L 2
 T+ L = di
i 1

Since each day is independent and  d is constant,


 T+ L = (T + L) d 2

 The standard deviation of a sequence of random


events equals the square root of the sum of the
variances.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 20
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Example--Fixed-Time Period Model
Daily demand for a product is 20 units.
The review period is 30 days, and lead time is 10 days.
Management has set a policy of satisfying 96 percent
of demand from items in stock. At the beginning of the
review period there are 200 units in inventory. The daily
demand standard deviation is 4 units.

How many units should be ordered?

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 21


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Solution

 T+ L = (T + L) d =
2
 30 + 10  4 2 = 25.298

dT(1- P) 20(30)(1-.96)
E(Z) = = = .949
 T+ L 25.298

E(Z) Z By Linear Interpolation,


1.00-0.90
.0
29
0.92-0.80 Z
=-
.8
0- .
10=
-
0.
836
.
08

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 22


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Solution (continued)

q = d(T + L) + Z  T + L - I

q = 20(30 + 10) + (-0.836)(25.298) - 200

q = 800 - 21.149 - 200 = 578.851, or 579 units

To satisfy 96 percent of demand order 579 units


at this review period.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 23
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Miscellaneous Systems
Optional Replenishment System
Maximum Inventory Level, M

q=M-I

Actual Inventory Level, I


M

Q = minimum acceptable order quantity

If q > Q, order q, otherwise do not order any.


© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 24
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Miscellaneous Systems
Bin Systems

Two-Bin System

Order One Bin of


Inventory
Full Empty
One-Bin System

Order Enough to
Refill Bin
Periodic Check
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 25
Irwin/McGraw-Hill
ABC Classification System
 Items kept in inventory are not of equal
importance in terms of:
– dollars invested
60
% of
– profit potential $ Value 30 A
0 B
– sales or usage volume % of 30 C
Use 60
– stock-out penalties

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 26


Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Inventory Accuracy and Cycle
Counting

 Inventory accuracy
– Do inventory records agree with physical count?

 Cycle Counting
– Frequent counts
» Which items?
» When?
» By whom?

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 27


Irwin/McGraw-Hill

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