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S12-1 1. Inventory Management - 60 Min 2. JIT - 30 Min 3. Case Discussion - 30 Min 4. “Final” Problems - 60 Min Agenda:
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S12-2 Types of Inventory Raw material Work-in-progress Maintenance/repair/operating supply Finished goods What is Inventory? Functions of inventory?
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S12-3 The Functions of Inventory To protect against lost sales - stock-outs To ”decouple” or separate various parts of the production process To provide a stock of goods that will provide a “selection” for customers To take advantage of quantity discounts To hedge against inflation and upward price changes
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S12-4 Divides on-hand inventory into 3 classes A class, B class, C class Basis is usually annual $ volume $ volume = Annual demand x Unit cost Policies based on ABC analysis Develop class A suppliers more Give tighter physical control of A items Forecast A items more carefully ABC Analysis
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S12-5 0 20 40 60 80 100 050100 % of Inventory Items % Annual $ Usage A B C Class% $ Vol% Items A8015 B 30 C555 Classifying Items as ABC
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S12-6 Inventory Costs Holding costs Holding costs - associated with holding or “carrying” inventory over time Ordering costs Ordering costs - associated with costs of placing order and receiving goods Setup costs Setup costs - cost to prepare a machine or process for manufacturing an order Excess at EOL Excess at EOL - mark down, scrap Stock-out costs Stock-out costs - a negative cost of inventory.
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S12-7 Fixed order-quantity models Economic order quantity Production order quantity Quantity discount Probabilistic models Fixed order-period models Inventory Models
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S12-8 Order Quantity Annual Cost Holding Cost Curve Total Cost Curve Order (Setup) Cost Curve Optimal Order Quantity (Q*) EOQ Model How Much to Order?
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S12-9 Optimal Order Quantity Expected Number of Orders Expected Time Between Orders Working Days/Year Working Days/Year == ×× == == = =× Q* DS H N D Q*Q* T N d D ROPdL 2 D = Demand per year S = Setup (order) cost per order H = Holding (carrying) cost d = Demand per day L = Lead time in days EOQ Model Equations
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S12-10 EOQ Model When To Order Reorder Point (ROP) Time Inventory Level Average Inventory (Q*/2) Lead Time Optimal Order Quantity (Q*)
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S12-11 Answers how much to order and when to order Allows partial receipt of material Other EOQ assumptions apply Suited for production environment Material produced, used immediately Provides production lot size Lower holding cost than EOQ model Production Order Quantity Model
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S12-12 POQ Model Inventory Levels Inventory Leve l Time Supply Begins Supply Ends Production portion of cycle Demand portion of cycle with no supply
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S12-13 POQ Model Inventory Levels Time Inventory Level Production Portion of Cycle Max. Inventory Q·(1- d/p) Q* Supply Begins Supply Ends Inventory level with no demand Demand portion of cycle with no supply
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S12-14 D = Demand per year S = Setup cost H = Holding cost d = Demand per day p = Production per day POQ Model Equations Optimal Order Quantity Setup Cost Holding Cost == - = * = * = Q H* d p Q D Q S p * 1 ( 0.5 * H * Q - d p 1 ) - d p 1 () 2*D*S () Maximum inventory level
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S12-15 Answers how much to order & when to order Allows quantity discounts Reduced price when item is purchased in larger quantities Other EOQ assumptions apply Trade-off is between lower price & increased holding cost Quantity Discount Model
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S12-16 Quantity Discount Model Total cost = Setup cost + Holding cost + product cost TC = (D/Q)(S) + (QH)/2 + PD D = Annual Demand Q = Order Quantity S = Set or order cost H = Holding cost P = Price
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S12-17 Quantity Discount Model TC = (D/Q)(S) + (QH)/2 + PD
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S12-18 Answer how much & when to order Considers Stock-out Costs Allow demand to vary Follows normal distribution Other EOQ assumptions apply Consider service level & safety stock Service level = 1 - Probability of stockout Higher service level means more safety stock More safety stock means higher ROP Probabilistic Models
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S12-19 Probabilistic Model Example 1. Stock out = 10(.2)($40)6 + 20(.1)($40)(6) = $960 2. Stock out = 10(.1)($40)6 = $240 1. 2.
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S12-20 Answers how much to order Orders placed at fixed intervals Inventory brought up to target amount Amount ordered varies No continuous inventory count Possibility of stockout between intervals Useful when vendors visit routinely Example: P&G representative calls every 2 weeks Fixed Period Model
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S12-21 Time Inventory Level Target maximum PeriodPeriodPeriod Fixed Period Model When to Order?
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S12-22 Waste is ‘anything other than the minimum amount of equipment, materials, parts, space, and worker’s time, which are absolutely essential to add value to the product.’ — Shoichiro Toyoda President, Toyota Introductory Quotation
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S12-23 Management philosophy of continuous and forced problem solving Supplies and components are ‘pulled’ through system to arrive where they are needed when they are needed. JIT: Attacks waste Anything not adding value to the product ( From the customer’s perspective) Exposes problems and bottlenecks caused by variability Achieves streamlined production What is Just-in-Time?
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S12-24 Overproduction Waiting Transportation Inefficient processing Inventory Unnecessary motion Product defects Types of Waste
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S12-25 Push versus Pull Push system: material is pushed into downstream workstations regardless of whether resources are available Pull system: material is pulled to a workstation just as it is needed
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S12-26 Results Queue and delay reduction, speeds throughput, frees assets, and wins orders Quality improvement, reduces waste and wins orders Cost reductions, increases margin or reduces selling price Variability reductions in the workplace, reduces waste and wins orders Rework reduction, reduces waste and wins orders
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S12-27 Incoming material and finished goods involve waste Buyer and supplier form JIT partnerships JIT partnerships eliminate Unnecessary activities In-plant inventory In-transit inventory Poor suppliers Suppliers
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S12-28 Few Nearby Repeat business Analysis to enable desirable suppliers to become or stay price competitive Competitive bidding mostly limited to new purchases Suppliers encouraged to extend JIT to their suppliers Characteristics of JIT Partnerships Suppliers
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S12-29 Characteristics of JIT Partnerships Quantities Steady output rate Frequent deliveries in small-lot quantities Long term contract agreements Minimal paperwork Delivery quantities fixed for whole contract term Little or no permissible overage or underage Suppliers package in exact quantities Suppliers reduce their production lot sizes or store unreleased material
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S12-30 Help suppliers to meet quality requirements Close relationship between buyers’ and suppliers quality assurance people Characteristics of JIT Partnerships Quality
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S12-31 Characteristics of JIT Partnerships Shipping Scheduling of inbound freight Gain control by use of company-owned or contract shipping and warehousing
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S12-32 Goals of JIT partnerships ¬ Elimination of unnecessary activities · Elimination (reduction) of in-plant inventory ® Elimination (reduction) of in-transit inventory Í Elimination of poor suppliers
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S12-33 JIT objective: Reduce movement of people and material Movement is waste! JIT requires Work cells for product families Moveable or changeable machines Short distances Little space for inventory Delivery directly to work areas Layout
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S12-34 Process LayoutWork Cell Saw Lathe Grinder Heat Treat Lathe Lathe Saw Heat Treat Grinder Grinder Press Press 1 1 2 3 4 5 2 6 Saw Press Work Cell versus Process Layout
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S12-35 Traditional: inventory exists in case problems arise JIT objective: Eliminate inventory JIT requires Small lot sizes Low setup time Containers for fixed number of parts JIT inventory: Minimum inventory to keep system running Inventory
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S12-36 JIT Scheduling Tactics Communicate the schedule to suppliers Make level schedules Freeze part of the schedule Perform to schedule Seek one-piece-make and one-piece-move Eliminate waste Produce in small lots Use kanbans Make each operation produce a perfect part
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S12-37 Japanese word for card Pronounced ‘kahn-bahn’ (not ‘can-ban’) Authorizes production from downstream operations ‘Pulls’ material through plant May be a card, flag, verbal signal etc. Used often with fixed-size containers Add or remove containers to change production rate Kanban
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S12-38 All activities involved in keeping equipment in working order Done to prevent failure JIT requires Scheduled & daily PM Operator performs PM Knows machines Responsible for product quality Preventive Maintenance (PM)
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S12-39 Milling Painting Rivet Battens Insert Studs Mount Hinges Glue App. Final Assem. Tent Plywood Stock F/R Stock Rear & Front Assembly Flow B - 2,500 B - 1,500 B - 500 B - 1,500 B - 1,000
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