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Statistical Inventory Models F Newsperson Model: –Single order in the face of uncertain demand –No replenishment F Base Stock Model: –Replenish one at a time –How much inventory to carry F (Q, r) Model –Order size Q –When inventory reaches r
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Issues F How much to order –Newsperson problem F When to order –Variability in demand during lead-time –Variability in lead-time itself
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Newsperson Problem F Ordering for a One-time market –Seasonal sales –Special Events F How much do we order? –Order more to increase revenue and reduce lost sales –Order less to avoid additional inventory and unsold goods.
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Newsperson Problem Order up to the point that the expected costs and savings for the last item are equal F Costs: C o –cost of item less its salvage value –inventory holding cost (usually small) F Savings: C s –revenue from the sale –good will gained by not turning away a customer
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Newsperson Problem F Expected Savings: –C s *Prob(d < Q) F Expected Costs: –C o *[1 - Prob(d < Q)] F Find Q so that Prob(d < Q) is C o C s + C o
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Example F Savings: –C s = $0.25 revenue F Costs: –C o = $0.15 cost F Find Q so that Prob(d < Q) is 0.375 0.15 0.25 + 0.15
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Finding Q (An Example) Normal Distribution (Upper Tail) z0
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Example Continued If the process is Normal with mean and std. deviation , then (X- )/ is Normal with mean 0 and std. dev. 1 If in our little example demand is N(100, 10) so = 100 and . –Find z in the N(0, 1) table: z =.32 –Transform to X: (X-100)/10 =.32 X = 103.2
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Extensions F Independent, periodic demands F All unfilled orders are backordered F No setup costs C s = Cost of one unit of backorder one period C o = Cost of one unit of inventory one period
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Extensions F Independent, periodic demands F All unfilled orders are lost F No setup costs C s = Cost of lost sale (unit profit) C o = Cost of one unit of inventory one period
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Base Stock Model F Orders placed with each sale –Auto dealership F Sales occur one-at-a-time F Unfilled orders backordered Known lead time l F No setup cost or limit on order frequency
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Different Views F Base Stock Level: R –How much stock to carry F Re-order point: r = R-1 –When to place an order F Safety Stock Level: s –Inventory protection against variability in lead time demand –s = r - Expected Lead-time Demand
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Different Tacks F Find the lowest base stock that supports a given customer service level F Find the customer service level a given base stock provides F Find the base stock that minimizes the costs of back-ordering and carrying inventory
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Finding the Best Trade-off F As with the newsperson –Cost of carrying last item in inventory = –Savings that item realizes F Cost of carrying last item in inventory –h, the inventory carrying cost $/item/year F Cost of backordering –b, the backorder carrying cost $/item/year
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Finding Balance F Cost the last item represents: –h*Fraction of time we carry inventory –h*Probability Lead-time demand is less than R –h*P(X < R) F Savings the last item represents: –b*Fraction of time we carry backorders –b*Probability Lead-time demand exceeds R –b*(1-P(X < R)) F Choose R so that P(X < R) = b/(h + b)
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Customer Service Level F What customer service level does base stock R provide? F What fraction of customer orders are filled from stock (not backordered)? F What fraction of our orders arrive before the demand for them? F What’s the probability that lead time demand is smaller than R? F P(X < R)
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Smallest Base Stock F What’s the smallest base stock that provides desired customer service level? e.g. 99% fill rate. F What’s the smallest R so that P(X.99?
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Control Policies F Periodic Review –eg, Monthly Inventory Counts –order enough to last till next review + cushion –orders are different sizes, but at regular intervals F Continuous Review –constant monitoring –(Q, R) policy –orders are the same size but at irregular intervals
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Continuous Review Time Inventory Reorder Level Order Quantity Safety Stock
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F Inventory used to protect against variability in Lead-Time Demand Lead-Time Demand: Demand between the time the order to restock is placed and the time it arrives Reorder Point is: R = Average Lead-Time Demand + Safety Stock
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Order Quantity F Trade-off –fixed cost of placing/producing order, A –inventory carrying cost, h
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A Model F Choose Q and r to minimize sum of –Setup costs –holding costs –backorder costs
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Approximating the Costs F Setup Costs –Setup D/Q times per year F Average Inventory is –cycle stock: Q/2 –safety stock: s –Total: Q/2+s u Q/2 + r - Expected Lead-time Demand Q/2 + r -
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Estimating The Costs F Backorder Costs –Number of backorders in a cycle u 0 if lead-time demand < r u x-r if lead-time demand x, exceeds r n(r) = r (x-r)g(x)dx –Expected backorders per year u n(r)D/Q
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The Objective F minimize Total Variable Cost AD/Q (Setup cost) h(Q/2 + r - )(Holding cost) bn(r)D/Q(Backorder cost)
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An Answer F Q = Sqrt(2D(A + bn(r))/h) F P(XŠ r) = 1 - hQ/bD F Compute iteratively: –Initiate: With n(r) = 0, calculate Q –Repeat: u From Q, calculate r u With this r, calculate Q
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Another Tack F Set the desired service level and figure the Safety Stock to Support it. F Use trade-off in Inventory and Setups to determine Q (EOQ, EPQ, POQ...)
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Variability in Lead-Time Demand F Variability in Lead-Time F Variability in Demand X = X t : period t in lead-time) F Var(X) = Var(X t )E(LT) + Var(LT)E(X t ) 2 F s = z*Sqrt(Var(X)) F Choose z to provide desired level of protection.
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Safety Stock F Analysis similar to Newsperson problem sets number of stockouts: –Savings of Inventory carrying cost –Cost of One more item short each time we stocked out C o =Stockouts/period* C s Stockouts/period = C o / C s
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Example F Safety Stock of Raw Material X –Cost of Stocking out? u Lost sales u Unused capacity u Idle workers –Cost of Carrying Inventory u Say, 10% of value or $2.50/unit/year –Number of times to stock out: 2.50/2,500,000 or 1 in a million (exaggerated)
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Example F Assuming: – Average Demand is 6,000/qtr (~ 92/day) –Variance in Demand is 100 units 2 /qtr (1.5/day) –Average Lead Time is 2 weeks (10 days) –Variance in Lead-Time is 4 days 2 –Lead-Time Demand is normally distributed F E(X) = 92*10 = 920 F Var(X) = 1.5*10 + 4*(8464) ~ 34,000
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Example F Look up 1 in a million on the Normal Upper Tail Chart –z ~ 4.6 F Compute Safety Stock –s = 4.6*Sqrt(34,000) = 4.6*184 = 846 F Compute Reorder Point –r = 920 + 846 = 1,766
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Other Issues F Why Carry Inventory? F How to Reduce Inventory? F Where to focus Attention?
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Why Carry Inventory? F Buffer Production Rates From: – Seasonal Demand – Seasonal Supplies “Anticipation Inventory”
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Other Types of Inventory “Decoupling Inventory” –Allows Processes to Operate Asynchronously –Examples: u DC’s “decouple” our distribution from individual customer orders u Holding tanks “decouple” 20K gal. syrup mixes from 5gal. bag-in-box units.
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Other Types of Inventory F “Cycle Stock” –Consequence of Batch Production –Used to Reduce Change Overs: u 8 hours and 400 tons of “red stripe” to change Pulp Mill from Hardwood to Pine Pulp u 4 hours to change part feeders on a Chip Shooter Reduce Setup Time!
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Other Types of Inventory “Pipeline Inventory” –Goods in Transit –Work in Process or WIP –Allows Processes to be in Different Places –Example: u Parts made in Mexico, Taurus Assembled in Atlanta
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Other Types of Inventory “Safety Stock” –Buffer against Variability in u Demand u Production Process u Supplies –Avoid Stockouts or Shortages
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Using Inventory F Inventory Finished Goods or Raw Materials? F Inventory at Central Facility or at DCs? F Extremes: –High Demand, Low Cost Product –Low Demand, High Cost Product
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Reducing Inventory F Reducing Anticipation Inventories –Manage Demand with Promotions, etc. –Reduce overall seasonality through product mix –Expand Markets
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Reducing Inventory F Reducing Cycle Stock –Reduce the length of Setups u Redesign the Products u Redesign the Process –Move Setups Offline –Fixturing, etc. –Reduce the number of Setups u Narrow Product Mix u Consolidate Production
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Reducing Inventory F Reducing Pipeline Inventory –Move the Right Products, eg, Syrup not Coke –Consolidate Production Processes –Redesign Distribution System –Use Faster Modes
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Reducing Inventory F Reducing Safety Stock –Reduce Lead-Time –Reduce Variability in Lead-Time –Reduce the Number of Products –Consolidate Inventory
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ABC Analysis F Where to focus Attention: Dollar Volume = Unit Price * Annual Demand –Category A: 20% of the Stock Keeping Units (SKU’s) account for 80% of the Dollar Volume –Category C: 50% of the SKU’s with lowest Dollar Volume –Category B: Remaining 30% of the SKU’s
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