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Chapter 13 Inventory Management.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 13 Inventory Management."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

2 Independent vs. Dependent Demand
Independent Demand (Chapter 13) A Dependent Demand (Chapter 15) B(4) C(2) D(2) E(1) D(3) F(2) Independent demand is uncertain Dependent demand is certain Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

3 Types of Inventories (1 of 2)
Raw materials & purchased parts Partially completed goods called work in progress Finished-goods inventories (manufacturing firms) or merchandise (retail stores) Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

4 Types of Inventories (2 of 2)
Replacement parts, tools, & supplies Goods-in-transit (pipeline) to warehouses or customers Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

5 Functions of Inventory
Meet anticipated demand Smooth production requirements Decouple components (areas) of the production-distribution Protect against stock-outs Take advantage of order cycles Help hedge against price increases or to take advantage of quantity discounts Permit operations (operation lead time) Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

6 Concerns of Inventory Management
Level of customer service have the right goods, in sufficient quantities, in the right place, at the right time in other words, the customer gets what ever he/she wants when he/she wants it Inventory-related costs ordering costs carrying costs Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

7 Objectives of Inventory Management (1 of 2)
Achieve satisfactory levels of customer service while keeping inventory costs within reasonable bounds Two fundamental decisions how much to order when to place the order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

8 Objectives of Inventory Management (2 of 2)
Possible performance measures customer satisfaction number of backorders/lost sales number of customer complaints inventory turnover ratio of annual cost of goods sold to average inventory investment days of inventory expected number of days of sales that can be supplied from existing inventory Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

9 Requirements for Effective Inventory Management
A system to keep track of the inventory on hand and on order A classification system for inventory items A reliable forecast of demand that includes an measure of forecast error Reasonable estimates of inventory holding costs, ordering costs, and shortage costs Knowledge of lead times and lead time variability Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

10 Inventory Counting Systems (1 of 2)
Perpetual Inventory (Continual) System Keeps track of removals from and receipts into inventory continuously Periodic System Physical count of items made at periodic intervals Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

11 Inventory Counting Systems (2 of 2)
Universal Product Code - Bar code printed on a label that has information about the item to which it is attached Cycle counting - taking physical counts of items and reconciling with records on a continual rotating basis Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

12 ABC Classification System
Classifying inventory according to some measure of importance and allocating control efforts accordingly A - very important B - mod. important C - least important Annual $ volume of items A B C High Low Few Many Number of Items Figure 13-1 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

13 Demand Forecast and Lead Time Information
Reliable estimates of the amount and timing of demand Lead time - time interval between ordering and receiving the order Extent of variability in demand and lead time Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

14 The Typical Procurement Cycle
Internal Order Cycle Order Request/Requisition Authorization signatures obtained Verification by inventory control Purchasing researches vendors, obtains quotes, etc. Order transferred to vendor Vendor Cycle Receives and enters order Manufactures or “picks” order Ships order Internal Receiving Cycle Receiving Incoming inspection Inventory control receives order, updates records, and notifies department Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9

15 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Cost Information Holding or carrying costs Ordering costs Shortage costs Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

16 Holding or Carrying Costs
Cost to carry a unit in inventory for a length of time Includes interest (opportunity cost), insurance, taxes, depreciation, obsolescence, deterioration May be expressed as a percentage of unit price or as a dollar amount per unit Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

17 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Ordering Costs Cost of ordering and receiving inventory Include determining how much is needed, preparing invoices, shipping costs, inspecting goods upon receipt for quantity and quality Generally expressed as a fixed dollar amount, regardless of order size Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

18 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Shortage Costs Result when demand exceeds the inventory on hand Include the opportunity cost of not making a sales, loss of customer goodwill, late charges, and in the case of internal customers, the cost of lost production or downtime Difficult to measure, thus may have be subjectively estimated Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

19 Basic Systems for Independent Demand
Fixed-order-quantity systems basic economic order quantity (EOQ) model [purchasing model] basic economic order quantity model with incremental or noninstantaneous replenishment [production order quantity] quantity discount model Fixed-order-interval systems Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

20 Basic Model Assumptions
Only one product is involved Annual demand requirements are known Demand is spread evenly throughout the year so that the demand rate is reasonable constant Lead time does not vary Each order is received in a single delivery There are no quantity discounts, i.e., the price is constant Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

21 How the Basic Fixed- Order-Quantity Model Works
Profile of Inventory Level Over Time Q Usage rate Quantity on hand Reorder point Receive order Place order Receive order Place order Receive order Lead time Figure 13-2 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

22 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
How Much to Order Goal is to minimize total annual costs Total Annual = cost Annual carrying cost Annual ordering cost + Q 2 H D S TC = + Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

23 Cost Minimization Goal
The Total Cost Curve is U-Shaped Annual Cost Annual Carrying Costs Annual Ordering Costs QO (optimal order quantity) Order Quantity (Q) Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

24 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Minimum Total Cost The total cost curve reaches its minimum where the carrying and ordering costs are equal. Alternatively we can use calculus by taking the first derivative of the total cost function and set the derivative (slope) equal to zero and solve for Q. Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

25 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Example 2, page 555 D=9,600 tires/year H=$16/tire/year S=$75/order a. What is the EOQ? Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

26 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Example 2, page 555 D=9,600 tires/year H=$16/tire/year S=$75/order b. How many times per year does the store reorder? Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

27 Example 2, page 555 D=9,600 tires/year H=$16/tire/year S=$75/order
c. What is the length of an order cycle? Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

28 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Example 2, page 555 D=9,600 tires/year H=$16/tire/year S=$75/order d. What is the total cost if the EOQ quantity is ordered? Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

29 Fixed Order Quantity Model with Incremental Replenishment
Used to determine the order size, production lot, if an item is produced at one stage of production and then sent to the next stage or the customer Differs from the basic model because orders are assumed to be supplied or produced at a uniform rate (p) rather than the order being received all at once Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

30 Fixed Order Quantity Model with Incremental Replenishment
Profile of Inventory Level Over Time Production rate - usage rate Q Quantity on hand Usage rate Reorder point Time Start to receive order Finish receiving order Place order Start to receive order Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management Lead time

31 Fixed Order Quantity Model with Incremental Replenishment
It is also assumed that the supply rate, p, is greater than the usage rate, u The change in maximum inventory level requires modification of the TC equation Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

32 Fixed Order Quantity Model with Incremental Replenishment
The optimization results in Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

33 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Example 4, page 558 D=48,000 wheels/year p=800 wheels/day H=$1/wheel/year S=$45/setup a. Optimal run size Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

34 Example 4, page 558 D=48,000 wheels/year p=800 wheels/day
H=$1/wheel/year u=200 wheels/day S=$45/setup b. Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

35 Example 4, page 558 D=48,000 wheels/year p=800 wheels/day
H=$1/wheel/year u=200 wheels/day S=$45/setup c. Cycle time for the optimal run size Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

36 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Example 4, page 558 D=48,000 wheels/year p=800 wheels/day H=$1/wheel/year u=200 wheels/day S=$45/setup d. Run time Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

37 Quantity Discount Model
This model differs from the basic model because the price per unit (P) may vary with the quantity ordered The supplier offers a lower unit price if larger quantities are ordered at one time This is presented as a price or discount schedule, i.e., a certain unit price covers a certain order quantity range Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

38 Discount Schedule Problem 14, page 588
Quantity Price $10 $9 600+ $8 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

39 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Under this condition, annual product cost becomes an incremental cost and must be considered in the determination of the EOQ The total annual costs (TC) = Annual holding cost + annual setup cost + annual product cost TC = (Q/2)H + (D/Q)S + DP Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

40 Costs Functions Under Quantity Discount
Total Cost Curve for Price 1 Figure 13-8 Order Quantity Total Cost Curve for Price 2 $ cost Total Cost Curve for Price 3 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

41 Costs Functions Under Quantity Discount
Total Cost Curve for Price 1 Order Quantity Total Cost Curve for Price 2 $ cost Total Cost Curve for Price 3 Quantity at which price 1 ends and price 2 begins Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

42 Costs Functions Under Quantity Discount
Total Cost Curve for Price 1 Total Cost Curve for Price 2 $ cost Total Cost Curve for Price 3 Quantity at which price 2 ends and price 3 begins Order Quantity Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

43 Costs Functions Under Quantity Discount
TOTAL COST CURVE $ cost Order Quantity Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

44 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount To find the EOQ, the following procedure is used Compute the basic EOQ. Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

45 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Using the appropriate price for the for the EOQ found in Step 1, compute the TC Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

46 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Compute the TC for all quantities greater than Step 1’s EOQ where a discount begins. Select the quantity with the lowest TC as the EOQ Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

47 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Problem 14a, page 588 600 P=$10 $ cost P=$9 P=$8 $41,000 400 Order Quantity Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

48 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Problem 14b, page 588 D=25 stones/day x 200 days/year = 5,000stones/year H=.30 x P 600 P=$10 S=$48/order $ cost P=$9 P=$8 400 Order Quantity Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

49 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount To find the EOQ, the following procedure is used Compute the basic EOQ using the lowest unit price and H=IP where I is an interest rate. If the resulting EOQ is feasible, i.e., that quantity can be purchased at the price used, it is optimal. Otherwise, go on to Step 2 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

50 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Problem 14b, page 588 D=5,000 stones/year H=.30 x $8 = $2.40/year/stone S=$48/order Compute the basic EOQ Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

51 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Using the EOQ from Step 1 and the discount schedule, find the price that should have been used and compute a new EOQ using this price. This new EOQ should be feasible. Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

52 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Compute the TC for the feasible EOQ found in Step 2 Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

53 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Quantity Discount Compute the TC for all quantities greater than Step 2’s EOQ where a discount begins. Select the quantity with the lowest TC as the EOQ Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

54 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
The Reorder Point In the fixed quantity system, the question of “when to order” is answered by setting a reorder point (ROP), an inventory level When the inventory drops to this level, the activities involved in the ordering or replenishment process are triggered. The time that it takes to complete these activities is the lead time The lead time period ends when the order is received Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

55 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
The Reorder Point During this lead time, customer demand continues and the inventory continues to decrease This is the only time you can run out of inventory (stockout) Management wants to set the reorder point sufficiently high to serve most of the customers, but not so high that carrying costs are excessive; a tradeoff Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

56 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
The Reorder Point One way to handle this tradeoff is for management to specify the customer service level they want their inventory management system to maintain order cycle service level is the probability that demand will not exceed the reorder point during the lead time annual service level is the percentage of demand filled directly from inventory Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

57 Setting the Reorder Point
If the demand during the lead time is constant, the reorder point would be set equal to that demand If the demand during the lead time is not constant, i.e., there is variability, the demand is assumed to follow some distribution Typically the distribution is assumed to be a normal distribution Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

58 Distribution of Demand Over the Lead Time
Quantity Demanded Normal distribution with a mean, , and a standard deviation,  Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

59 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
If the ROP is set at the mean of the distribution, what would the order cycle service level be? Quantity Demanded ROP Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

60 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
What if management wanted the order cycle service level to be greater than 50%? Quantity Demanded Service level ROP Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

61 Basis for Setting the Reorder Point
Determinants of the reorder point The parameters (mean and standard deviation) of the distribution of demand over the entire lead time The probability that demand will not exceed the reorder point during the lead time acceptable to management, order cycle service level Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

62 Developing the Demand Distribution Parameters
We assume that the demand for each time period (usually a day) comes from a normal distribution with a mean of and a standard deviation of We also assume the lead time is constant at some number of time periods (usually days) Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

63 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Lead Time Demand To determine the parameters of the distribution of demand over the entire lead time period, we need to add together the demand distributions for each day of the lead time Lead Time Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

64 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Lead Time Demand Summation + + + + Since the daily demand distributions are assumed to be identical, the distribution has a mean of and a standard deviation of Lead Time Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

65 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Reorder point Given the order cycle service level, the proper safety stock is calculated using the normal table. The reorder point is found by adding this safety stock amount to the mean (expected demand) Lead Time Demand Given the order cycle service level, the proper safety stock is calculated using the normal table. safety stock Lead Time Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

66 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Reorder point Lead Time Demand safety stock The safety stock is where is found in the normal table based on the specified order cycle service level Lead Time Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

67 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Reorder point Lead Time Demand Order cycle service level Risk of shortage safety stock Lead Time Place order Receive order Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

68 Reorder Point Calculation
Order cycle service level Risk of a stockout Probability of no stockout Quantity Mean or expected demand = Standard deviation = Safety stock Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

69 Administration of the System
Using the perpetual counting system, a signal is given when the records indicate that the inventory reaches the ROP Using the periodic counting system, a two-bin system could be used two bins of inventory bin A holds an amount equal to the reorder point bin B holds the remainder of the order customers are supplied out of bin B when bin B is empty, it is time to reorder customers are then supplied out of bin A until the order arrives Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

70 Fixed-Order-Interval Model

71 Basic Fixed-Order-Interval System
Figure 13-15 Target Maximum Inventory Level Over Time Order Quantity Order Quantity Order Quantity Order Quantity How much to order Inventory Level Minimum Inventory OI OI OI OI When to order Time Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

72 Operation of Fixed-Order-Interval Systems
As demand for the inventoried item occurs, the inventory level drops When a prescribed period of time has elapsed, the ordering process is triggered, i.e., the time between orders is fixed or constant At that time the order quantity is determined using order quantity = target maximum level - current inventory level Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

73 Operation of Fixed-Order-Interval Systems
After the lead time elapses, the ordered quantity is received, and the inventory level increases The maximum inventory level is expected demand during protection interval + safety stock, or Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

74 Administration of the System
Using the periodic counting system, the inventory is reviewed (counted) at the end of each order interval Using the perpetual counting system, an item’s inventory level is checked in the inventory at the end of each order internal Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

75 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Reasons to Use Supplier’s policy might encourage use Some situations do not lend themselves to continuous monitoring Used where it is desirable to physically count inventory each time an order is placed Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management

76 Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Benefits/Advantages Benefits results in tight control needed for A items in a A-B-C classification grouping ordering to one supplier may result in savings Ordering Packing Shipping costs Disadvantages larger amount of safety stock needed for the same service level cost of periodic reviews Management 3620 Chapter 13 Inventory Management


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