Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
1 Lecture 6 Inventory Management Chapter 12
2
2 Types of Inventories Raw materials & purchased parts Partially completed goods called work in progress Finished-goods inventories (manufacturing firms) or merchandise (retail stores) Replacement parts, tools, & supplies Goods-in-transit to warehouses or customers
3
3 Functions of Inventory To meet anticipated demand To smooth production requirements To decouple operations To protect against stock-outs To take advantage of order cycles To help hedge against price increases To permit operations To take advantage of quantity discounts
4
4 Objective of Inventory Control To achieve satisfactory levels of customer service while keeping inventory costs within reasonable bounds Level of customer service Costs of ordering and carrying inventory
5
5 Lead time: time interval between ordering and receiving the order Holding (carrying) costs: cost to carry an item in inventory for a length of time, usually a year Ordering costs: costs of ordering and receiving inventory Shortage costs: costs when demand exceeds supply Key Inventory Terms
6
6 Divides inventory into three classes based on annual dollar volume Class A - high annual dollar volume Class B - medium annual dollar volume Class C - low annual dollar volume Used to establish policies that focus on the few critical parts and not the many trivial ones No “hard-and-fast” rule to classify into different categories Inventory Classification Systems ABC Analysis
7
7 Item Stock Number Percent of Number of Items Stocked Annual Volume (units)xUnit Cost= Annual Dollar Volume Percent of Annual Dollar VolumeClass #1028620%1,000$ 90.00$ 90,00038.8%72%A #11526500154.0077,00033.2%A #127601,55017.00$ 26,35011.3%B #1086730%35042.8615,0016.4%23%B #105001,00012.5012,5005.4%B ABC Analysis Example #12572600$ 14.17$ 8,5023.7%C #140752,000.601,200.5%C #0103650%1008.50850.4%5%C #013071,200.42504.2%C #10572250.60150.1%C $232,057
8
8 Economic order quantity (EOQ) model Economic production model (EPQ) Quantity discount model Economic Order Quantity Models
9
9 The Inventory Cycle Profile of Inventory Level Over Time Quantity on hand Q Receive order Place order Receive order Place order Receive order Lead time Reorder point Usage rate Time
10
10 Total Cost Annual carrying cost Annual ordering cost Total cost =+ Q 2 H D Q S TC = + Formula (11-1)
11
11 Cost Minimization Goal Order Quantity (Q) The Total-Cost Curve is U-Shaped Ordering Costs QOQO Annual Cost ( optimal order quantity)
12
12 Deriving the EOQ & Minimum Total Cost The total cost curve reaches its minimum where the carrying and ordering costs are equal. Number of orders per year = D/Q 0 Length of order cycle = Q 0 /D Formula (11-2) Formula (11-3)
13
13 Inventory Management – In-class Example Number 2 pencils at the campus book-store are sold at a fairly steady rate of 60 per week. It cost the bookstore $12 to initiate an order to its supplier and holding costs are $0.005 per pencil per year. Determine (a) The optimal number of pencils for the bookstore to purchase to minimize total annual inventory cost, (b) Number of orders per year, (c) The length of each order cycle, (d) Annual holding cost, (e) Annual ordering cost, and (f) Total annual inventory cost. (g) If the order lead time is 4 months, determine the reorder point. Illustrate the inventory profile graphically. What additional cost would the book-store incur if it orders in batches of 1000?
14
14 Management Scientist Solutions (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g)
15
15 Only one product is involved Annual demand requirements known Demand is even throughout the year Lead time does not vary Each order is received in a single delivery There are no quantity discounts Assumptions of EOQ Model
16
16 EOQ with Quantity Discounts The EOQ with quantity discounts model is applicable where a supplier offers a lower purchase cost when an item is ordered in larger quantities. This model's variable costs are Annual holding, Ordering cost, and Purchase costs For the optimal order quantity, the annual holding and ordering costs are not necessarily equal.
17
17 EOQ with Quantity Discounts Formulae Optimal order quantity: the procedure for determining Q * will be demonstrated Number of orders per year: D/Q * Time between orders (cycle time): Q */D years Total annual cost: (formula 11.9 of book) (holding + ordering + purchase)
18
18 Example – EOQ with Quantity Discount Walgreens carries Fuji 400X instant print film The film normally costs Walgreens $3.20 per roll Walgreens sells each roll for $5.25 Walgreens's average sales are 21 rolls per week Walgreens’s annual inventory holding cost rate is 25% It costs Walgreens $20 to place an order with Fujifilm, USA Fujifilm offers the following discount scheme to Walgreens 7% discount on orders of 400 rolls or more 10% discount for 900 rolls or more, and 15% discount for 2000 rolls or more Determine Walgreen’s optimal order quantity
19
19 Management Scientist Solutions
20
20 Too much inventory Tends to hide problems Easier to live with problems than to eliminate them Costly to maintain Wise strategy Reduce lot sizes Reduce safety stock Operations Strategy
21
21 The Balance Sheet – Dell Computer Co.
22
22 Income Statement – Dell Computer Co.
23
23 Debt Ratio What It Measures: The extent to which a firm uses debt financing How You Compute: The ratio of total debt to total assets
24
24 Inventory Turnover Ratio What It Measures: How effectively a firm is managing its inventories. How You Compute: This ratio is computed by dividing sales by inventories Inventory turnover ratio =
25
25 Course Conclusions Recognize that not every tool is the best fit for every problem Pay attention to variability Forecasting Inventory management - Deliveries from suppliers Build flexibility into models Pay careful attention to technology Opportunities Improvement in service and response times Risks Costs involved Difficult to integrate Need for periodic updates Requires training Garbage in, garbage out Results and recommendations you present are only as reliable as the model and its inputs Most decisions involve tradeoffs Not a good idea to make decisions to the exclusion of known information
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.