Chapter 13 Notes
Chapter 13 Notes
Inventories are a vital part of business: (1) necessary for operations and (2) contribute to
customer satisfaction
A typical firm has roughly 30% of its current assets and as much as 90% of its working capital
invested in inventory
Types of Inventory:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Inventory Management
Management has two basic functions concerning inventory:
1. Establish a system for tracking items in inventory
2. Make decisions about
When to order
How much to order
holding costs
ordering costs
shortage costs
Periodic System
o
Perpetual System
o
System that keeps track of removals from inventory continuously, thus monitoring
current levels of each item
Two-bin system: Two containers of inventory; reorder when the first is empty
Forecasts
o
Lead time
o
Inventory Costs
Purchase cost
Ordering costs
Setup costs
Shortage costs
Costs resulting when demand exceeds the supply of inventory; often unrealized
profit per unit
A-B-C approach
Cycle counting
A typical Inventory control problem deal with three types of costs: Carrying,
Replenishment, and shortage costs.
Typically we deal with four parameters: Reorder Point (R), Order Target Level (T),
Lot-size (Q), Periodic Review (P).
The lot size, Q, that minimizes total annual inventory holding and ordering costs
Deriving EOQ
o
Using calculus, we take the derivative of the total cost function and set the derivative
(slope) equal to zero and solve for Q.
The total cost curve reaches its minimum where the carrying and ordering costs are
equal.
Qo = sqrt(2DS/H)
A museum of natural history opened a gift shop which operates 52 weeks per year.
Sales are 18 units per week, the supplier charges $60 per unit.
What is the annual cycle-inventory cost of the current policy of using a 390-unit lot size?
Calculating EOQ
o The EOQ formula
For the bird feeders, calculate the EOQ and its total annual cycle-inventory cost. How
frequently will orders be placed if the EOQ is used?
Calculating EOQ
The EOQ formula: sqrt(2DS/H)
Time between orders: EOQ/D
Total Cost of EOQ model: ____________________________________
Inventory Control System
Four variables: s, S, t, q
Nature of demand
Independent demand
Dependent demand
Includes scheduled receipts (SR), on-hand inventory (OH), and back orders (BO)
IP = OH + SR - BO
Example of Q system:
The on-hand inventory is only 10 units, and the reorder point R is 100. There are no
backorders and one open order for 200 units. Should a new order be placed?
Solution:
IP = OH + SR BO = 10 + 200 0 = 210
R = 100
Decision: Place no new order
Continuous Review Systems: Selecting the reorder point with variable demand and constant
lead time
Reorder Point
1. Choose an appropriate service-level policy
Protection interval
Suppose that the demand during lead time is normally distributed with an average of 85 and
dLT = 40. Find the safety stock, and reorder point R, for a 95 percent cycle-service level.
Use simulation when both demand and lead time are variable
Total costs for the P system are the sum of the same three cost elements as in the Q
system
Example of P system:
Return to Discount Appliance Store, but now use the P system for the item.
Previous information
Demand = 10 units/wk (assume 52 weeks per year) = 520
EOQ = 62 units (with reorder point system)
Target inventory:
Total Cost:
Comparative Advantages
Convenient
Hybrid System
Optional replenishment systems
o Optimal review, min-max, or (s,S) system, like the P system
o Reviews IP at fixed time intervals and places a variable-sized order to cover
expected needs
o Ensures that a reasonable large order is placed
Base-stock system
o Replenishment order is issued each time a withdrawal is made
o Order quantities vary to keep the inventory position at R
o Minimizes cycle inventory, but increases ordering costs
o Appropriate for expensive items