- •What are two inventory classification systems? How do these differ? What is the purpose of such systems? How is each analysis done?
- •What is the 80-20 rule? How is it stated? What causes this to occur when looking at products?
- •What are the various costs associated with inventory? Which are largest? How are they expressed?
- •Ordering Cost
- •Carrying Cost (Holding costs) – the largest!
- •Inventory Storage Cost
- •Cost of Capital
- •4. What are reasons for holding physical supply inventory? What are reasons for holding physical distribution inventory?
- •Market penetration
- •Transportation and Physical Barriers
- •Production lead times
- •Avoid Certain Costs
- •6. What is "just-in-time" inventory management? What are the characteristics? When does it work best? How does it compare to the American system? Problems?
- •7. What are the functional types of inventory we find in a logistical system?
- •8. Trade-off Analysis: Service-Level vs. Cost
- •What is the objective of inventory management and control?
- •Inventory Management provides:
- •Meet Demand
- •Control Costs
- •Identify Opportunities
- •4 Categories of an Inventory Management Tool
- •Logistics Interfaces with Operations
- •Interface activities:
- •Explain the value-added role of logistics
- •Costs Are Significant
- •Logistics Customer Service Expectations Are Increasing
- •Supply and Distribution Lines Are Lengthening with Greater Complexity
- •Logistics/sc Is Important to Strategy
- •Logistics/sc Adds Significant Customer Value
- •12. What are the six major steps that are recommended for a logistics network design process?
- •13. Describe the four main scenarios which occur in the event of a stockout?
- •14. Explain the productivity objective to be achieved through warehouse layout and design?
- •Describe the role of transportation in logistics?
- •Creating Economic Utility
- •Market Area Decision
- •Purchasing Decisions
- •Location Decisions
- •Pricing Decisions
- •Transportation's Place in the Economy
- •Geographic specialization
- •Large-Scale Production
- •Describe some of the dimensions upon which supply chain relationships may differ?
- •17. What are the possible reasons for a company to outsource its logistics? What does this trend mean for today’s businesses?
- •18. What is the role and functions of supply chain intermediaries?
- •20. What are the reasons for logistics providers to improve and expand their businesses? In what way logistics providers of different levels differ?
- •21. How to identify what level of customer service should be offered? (consider tradeoffs)
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What are two inventory classification systems? How do these differ? What is the purpose of such systems? How is each analysis done?
Inventory in any organization can run in thousands of part numbers or classifications and millions of part numbers in quantity. Therefore inventory is required to be classified with some logic to be able to manage the same.
ABC Classification
In most of the organizations inventory is categorized according to ABC Classification Method, which is based on Pareto principle. Here the inventory is classified based on the value of the units. The principle applied here is based on 80/20 principles. Accordingly the classification can be as under:
A Category Items Comprise 20%
B Category Items Comprise 30%
C Category Items Comprise 50%
Advantages of ABC Classification
This kind of categorization of inventory helps one manage the entire volume and assign relative priority to the right category.
A Category Items: Helps one identify these stocks as high value items and ensure tight control in terms of process control, physical security as well as audit frequency. It helps the managers and inventory planners to maintain accurate records and draw management’s attention to the issue on hand to facilitate instant decision-making.
B Category Items: These can be given second priority with lesser frequency of review and less tightly controls with adequate documentation, audit controls in place.
C Category Items: Can be managed with basic and simple records. Inventory quantities can be larger with very few periodic reviews.
Disadvantages
Inventory Classification does not reflect the frequency of movement of stocks and therefore can mislead controllers.
B & C Categories can often get neglected and pile in huge stocks.
EOQ Model
Economic order quantity (EOQ) is the level of inventory that minimizes total inventory holding costs and ordering costs. It is one of the oldest classical production scheduling models. The framework used to determine this order quantity is also known as Wilson EOQ Model
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Q = optimal order quantity
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D = annual demand quantity of the product
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S = fixed cost per order (not per unit, typically cost of ordering and shipping and handling. This is not the cost of goods)
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H = annual holding cost per unit (also known as carrying cost or storage cost) (warehouse space, refrigeration, insurance, etc. usually not related to the unit cost)
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What is the 80-20 rule? How is it stated? What causes this to occur when looking at products?
The Pareto principle (also known as the 80-20 rule, the law of the vital few) states that, for many events, roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes.
It is a common rule of thumb in business; e.g., "80% of your sales come from 20% of your clients".
Pareto distribution shows up in several different aspects relevant to entrepreneurs and business managers. For example:
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80% of your profits come from 20% of your customers
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80% of your complaints come from 20% of your customers
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80% of your profits come from 20% of the time you spend
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80% of your sales come from 20% of your products
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80% of your sales are made by 20% of your sales staff[9]
Therefore, many businesses have an easy access to dramatic improvements in profitability by focusing on the most effective areas and eliminating, ignoring, automating, delegating or re-training the rest, as appropriate.
Pareto’s principle is widely used in managing product range. The most common business practice based on Pareto’s distribution is ABC analysis.
ABC classes are
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‘A’ items – 20% of the items accounts for 70% of the annual sales.
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‘B’ items - 30% of the items accounts for 25% of the annual sales.
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‘C’ items - 50% of the items accounts for 5% of the annual sales.
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Classifying the products helps distinguishing the efforts a company should pay for it’s products. For example, A products have to be managed carefully, advertised a lot, be always in stock, whereas group C don’t need so much attention, and even some of C products can be eliminated from company’s product range.