Inventory Management - Control - Lecture 3
Inventory Management - Control - Lecture 3
INVENTORY MANAGEMENT
- CONTROL
Joanna Oleśków-Szłapka
What Is Inventory?
□Stock of items kept
to meet future
demand
□Purpose of
inventory
management
□how many units
to order?
□when to order?
Types of Inventory
Inputs Outputs
• Raw Materials Process
• Finished Goods
• Purchased parts • Scrap and Waste
• Maintenance and
Repair Materials
(in warehouses, or
“in transit”)
In Process
• Partially Completed
Products and
Subassemblies (often on the factory
floor)
Water Tank Analogy for
Inventory
Inventory Level
Supply Rate
Buffers Demand
Rate from Supply
Inventory Level Rate
Demand Rate
Two Forms of Demand
Dependent
Demand for items used to produce
final products
Tires stored at a Goodyear plant are
an example of a dependent demand
item
Independent
Demand for items used by external
customers
Cars, appliances, computers, and
houses are examples of independent
demand inventory
Inventory Hides Problems
Bad
Design
Lengthy Poor
Setups Quality
Machine
Inefficient Unreliable
Breakdown
Layout Supplier
Inventory and Supply Chain
Management - problems
□Bullwhip effect
□demand information is distorted as it moves
away from the end-use customer
□higher safety stock inventories to are stored to
compensate
□Seasonal or cyclical demand
□Inventory provides independence from
vendors
□Take advantage of price discounts
□Inventory provides independence between
stages and avoids work stop-pages
Inventory Costs
Carrying cost
cost of holding an item in inventory
Ordering cost
cost of replenishing inventory
Shortage cost
temporary or permanent loss of sales
when demand cannot be met
Typical Inventory Carrying Costs
Costs as % of
Inventory Value
Housing cost: 6%
□ Building rent or depreciation (3% - 10%)
Investment costs: 5%
□ Borrowing costs (2% - 10%)
□ Taxes on inventory (15% - 50%)
□ Insurance on inventory
Pilferage, scrap, and obsolescence
ave = Q/2
Reorder point, R
2DS
Q* =
H
2(1,000)(10)
Q* = = 40,000 = 200 units
0.50
An EOQ Example
Expected Demand
number of = N = =
orders Order quantity
An EOQ Example
Number of working
Expected days per year
time between = T =
orders N
An EOQ Example
=dxL
D
d = Number of working days in a year
Reorder Point: Example
Safety stock
buffer added to on hand inventory during lead
time
Stockout
an inventory shortage
Service level
probability that the inventory available during
lead time will meet demand
Variable Demand with
a Reorder Point
Q
Inventory level
Reorder
point, R
0
LT LT
Time
Reorder Point with
a Safety Stock
Inventory level
Q
Reorder
point, R
Safety Stock
0
LT LT
Time
Reorder Point With
Variable Demand
R = dL + zσ d L
where
d = average daily demand
L = lead time
σ d = the standard deviation of daily demand
z = number of standard deviations
corresponding to the service level
probability (service factor)
zσ d L = safety stock
Reorder Point for
a Service Level
Probability of
meeting demand during
lead time = service level
Probability of
a stockout
Safety stock
zσ d L
dL R
Demand
Safety factor values for CSL
Reorder Point for
Variable Demand
R = dL + z σ d L Safety stock = z σ d L
= 30(10) + (1.64)(5)( 10) = (1.64)(5)( 10)
= 325.9 m = 25.9 m