Example ( In terms of Percentage)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13: Learning Objectives
Advertisements

Inventory Management for Independent Demand Chapter 12, Part 2.
Introduction to Management Science
Chapter 13 - Inventory Management
12 Inventory Management.
Inventory Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
8-1Inventory Management William J. Stevenson Operations Management 8 th edition.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Inventory Management.
CHAPTER 11 Inventory Management.
12 Inventory Management.
Chapter 12 Inventory Management
Operations Management
Managerial Decision Modeling with Spreadsheets
Inventory Management A Presentation by R.K.Agarwal, Manager (Finance), PFC.
C 11 Inventory Management
Lecture 5 Project Management Chapter 17.
Operations Management Inventory Management Chapter 12 - Part 2
Chapter 13 - Inventory Management
1 Operations Management Inventory Management. 2 The Functions of Inventory To have a stock of goods that will provide a “selection” for customers To take.
Inventory Management for Independent Demand
Chapter 12: Inventory Control Models
Inventory Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
13 Inventory Management.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Inventory Management.
Independent Demand Inventory Management
13-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operations Management, Seventh Edition, by William J. Stevenson Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
CHAPTER Inventory Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Operations Management, Eighth Edition, by William J. Stevenson Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill.
1 Slides used in class may be different from slides in student pack Chapter 17 Inventory Control  Inventory System Defined  Inventory Costs  Independent.
Inventory Stock of items held to meet future demand
Economic Order Quantity The economic order quantity (EOQ) is the fixed order quantity (Q) that minimizes the total annual costs of placing orders and holding.
Inventory Management MD707 Operations Management Professor Joy Field.
Independent Demand Inventory Planning CHAPTER FOURTEEN McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Inventory Management. Learning Objectives  Define the term inventory and list the major reasons for holding inventories; and list the main requirements.
Chapter 12 : Inventory Management Outline  The Importance of Inventory  Functions of Inventory  Types of Inventory.
13Inventory Management. 13Inventory Management Types of Inventories Raw materials & purchased parts Partially completed goods called work in progress.
1 Chapter 6 –Inventory Management Policies Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 4th Edition © Wiley 2010.
Chapter 12 – Independent Demand Inventory Management Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 2 nd Edition © Wiley 2005 PowerPoint Presentation.
LSM733-PRODUCTION OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT By: OSMAN BIN SAIF LECTURE 18 1.
BUAD306 Chapter 13 - Inventory Management. Everyday Inventory Food Gasoline Clean clothes… What else?
Operations Research II Course,, September Part 3: Inventory Models Operations Research II Dr. Aref Rashad.
Inventory Management for Independent Demand Chapter 12.
What types of inventories business carry, and why they carry them.
Chapter 17 Inventory Control
Inventory Management Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of.
Inventory Control. Meaning Of Inventory Control Inventory control is a system devise and adopted for controlling investment in inventory. It involve inventory.
Week 14 September 7, 2005 Learning Objectives:
CHAPTER 6 Inventory Management. Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin 6-2 Purposes of Inventory Enables.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 12 Inventory Management.
REORDER QUANTITY METHODS AND EOQ
PENGENDALIAN PERSEDIAAN (Bagian 2)
Inventory Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Production planning and control
Inventory Stock of items held to meet future demand
Chapter 13 Inventory Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 13 - Inventory Management
BUSI 104 Operations Management
Lecture 23 Order Quantities
Inventory Models (II) under SC environment
Assignment 5: Part (A) The Dine Corporation is both a producer and a user of brass couplings. The firm operates 220 days a year and uses the couplings.
Key Inventory Terms Lead time: Holding (carrying) costs:
Stevenson 13 Inventory Management.
Chapter 13 - Inventory Management
EOQ for Production not Order (EPQ)
Production and Operations Management
Slides by John Loucks St. Edward’s University.
EOQ Inventory Management
Chapter 10 Inventory Management
Chapter 13 Inventory Management
Inventory Stock of items held to meet future demand
Presentation transcript:

Example ( In terms of Percentage) CNG-LPG company in Karachi, purchases 5000 compressors a year at Rs.8,000 each. Ordering costs are Rs. 500 and Annual carrying costs are 20 % of the purchase price. Compute the Optimal price and the total annual cost of ordering and carrying the inventory.

Example ( In terms of Percentage) Data D=Demand =5,000 S=Ordering= Rs. 500 H=Holding/Carrying Cost=0.2 X 8,000=Rs.1600

Example 3 ( In terms of Percentage) Q0= Sq Root of ( 2(5,000)(500)/(1600)) = 55.9=56 Compressors TC= Carrying costs + Ordering Costs =Q0/2 ( H) + D/Q0 (S) = 56/2 ( 1600) + 5000/56 (500) = 28 ( 1600)+ 44,643 =44,800+44,643=Rs. 89,443

Economic Production Quantity (EPQ) Production done in batches or lots Capacity to produce a part exceeds the part’s usage or demand rate. Assumptions of EPQ are similar to EOQ except orders are received incrementally during production.

Economic Production Quantity Usage Production & Usage Production & Usage Usage Inventory Level

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions Only one item is involved Annual demand is known Usage rate is constant Usage occurs continuously Production rate is constant Lead time does not vary No quantity discounts

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions The basic EOQ model assumes that each order is delivered at a single point in time. If the firm is the producer and user, practical examples indicate that inventories are replenished over time and not instantaneously. If usage and production ( delivery) rates are equal, then there is no buildup of inventory.

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions Set up costs in a way our similar to ordering costs because they are independent of lot size.

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions The larger the run size, the fewer the number of runs needed and hence lower the annual setup. The number of runs is D/Q and the annual setup cost is equal to the number of runs per year times the cost per run ( D/Q)S.

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions Total Cost is TC min= Carrying Cost+ Setup Cost = ( I max/2)H+ (D/Q0)S Where I max= Maximum Inventory

Economic Run Size

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions Where p= production rate U = usage rate

Economic Production Quantity Assumptions The Run time ( the production phase of the cycle) is a function of the run size and production rate Run time = Q0/p The maximum and average inventory levels are I max = Q0/p (p-u) I average= I max/2

Example (Economic Run Size) A firm in Sialkot produces 250,000 each world class footballs for both domestic and international markets . It can make footballs at a rate of 2000 per day. The footballs are manufactured uniformly over the whole year. Carrying cost is Rs. 100 per football and Setup cost for a production run is Rs. 2500. The manufacturing unit operates for 250 days per year.

Example 4 Economic Run Size Determine the Optimal Run Size. Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup cost. Cycle time for the Optimal Run Size. Run time

Example 4 Economic Run Size Determine the Optimal Run Size. = Sq Root (2 X 250,000 X 2500/100 )( Sq Root (2 000 /2000-1000 )) 2500( sqroot2X2)=5000 footballs.

Example 4 Economic Run Size Minimum total annual cost for carrying and setup cost. = Carrying Cost + Set up Cost =( I max/2)H+ ( D/Q0)S Where I max= Q0/p ((p-u))=5000/2000(1000) =2500 footballs Now TC= 2500/2 X 100 + (250,000/5000 )(2500) =1250 X 100 + 125,000 =125,000+ 125,000 = Rs. 250,000

Example 4 Economic Run Size Cycle time for the Optimal Run Size. Q0/U=5000/1000= 5 days Run time Q0/p=5000/2000= 2.5 days

Quantity Discount Price reductions for large orders are called Quantity Discounts.

Total Costs with Purchasing Cost Annual carrying cost Purchasing TC = + Q 2 H D S ordering PD

Total Costs with PD Cost Adding Purchasing cost doesn’t change EOQ TC with PD TC without PD PD Quantity Adding Purchasing cost doesn’t change EOQ

Example The maintenance department of a large cardiology hospital in Islamabad uses about 1200 cases of corrosion removal liquid, used for maintenance of hospital. Ordering costs are Rs 100, carrying cost are Rs 20 per case, and the new price schedule indicates that

Example orders of less than 50 cases will cost Rs 1250 per case, 50 to 79 cases will cost Rs 1150 per case , 80 to 99 cases will cost Rs 1050 per case and larger costs will be Rs 1000 per case. Determine the Optimal Order Quantity and the Total Cost.

Example D=1200 case. S= Rs. 100 per case H=Rs.20 per case Range Price 1 to 49 Rs 1250 50 to 79 Rs 1150 80 to 99 Rs 1050 100 or more Rs 1000

Example Compute the Common EOQ=Sq Root ( 2DS/H) = Sq Root ( 2 X 100 X 1200/20) =Sq Root (12000) =109.5=110 cases which would be brought at 1000 per oder The total Cost to Purchase 1200 cases per year would be TC= Carrying Cost+ Order Cost+ Purchase Cost =(Q/2)H+(D/Q0)S+PD =(110/2)20+(1200/110)100+1200X 1000 =1100+1091+12000,000 =Rs. 1,202,191

When to Reorder with EOQ Ordering Reorder Point - When the quantity on hand of an item drops to this amount, the item is reordered. Safety Stock - Stock that is held in excess of expected demand due to variable demand rate and/or lead time. Service Level - Probability that demand will not exceed supply during lead time.

Example An apartment complex in Quetta requires water for its home use. Usage= 2 barrels a day Lead time= 5 days ROP= Usage X Lead Time = 2 barrels a day X 7 = 14 barrels

Determinants of the Reorder Point The rate of demand The lead time Stock out risk (safety stock) Demand and/or lead time variability

Example An owner of a Montessori equipment firm in Karachi, determined from historical records that demand for wood required for Montessori equipment averages 25 tones per anum. His operations management expertise allowed him to determine the demand during lead that could be described by a normal distribution that has a mean of 25 tons and a standard deviation of 2.5 tons.

Fixed-Order-Interval Model Orders are placed at fixed time intervals. Order quantity for next interval? Suppliers might encourage fixed intervals. May require only periodic checks of inventory levels. Risk of stock out.