Inventory and Inventory Classification
Why do we stock inventory?
-Stock out protection -Economies of sale -Production and capacity smoothing -Price speculation
Stock out protection
-To decouple or separate various parts of the production process -To decouple the firm from fluctuations in demand and provide a stock of goods that will provide a selection for customers
Economies of sale
-To take advantage of quantity discounts -average unit cost of output decreases with volume
Production and capacity smoothing
-maintaining a constant production rate to weather seasonal fluctuation
Record accuracy
-necessary to make precise decisions about ordering, scheduling, and shipping -Incoming and outgoing record keeping must be accurate
Advantages of cycle counting
1. Eliminates shutdowns and interruptions 2. Eliminates annual inventory adjustment 3. Trained personnel audit inventory accuracy 4. Allows causes of errors to be identified and corrected 5. Maintains accurate inventory records
Inventory management issues
1. For which items should inventory be earned? 2. Where should inventory be stored? 3. What is the right inventory level for each product? 4. How can we control inventories? -Financial Control -Physical Control 5. How can we evaluate inventory performance?
How are inventory items classified?
ABC analysis
How is the accuracy of the inventory records maintained?
Cycle counting
What is used with ABC analysis
Cycle counting
ABC analysis
Divides inventory into 3 classes based on annual dollar value used to establish policies that focus on the few critical parts and not the many trivial ones
How is the inventory performance measured?
Inventory Turns
Cycle counting
Items are counted and records updated on a periodic basis
Inventory Turns
The number of times that your inventory cycles turn over per year
Price speculation
To hedge against inflation
Inventory management objective
ability to strike a balance between inventory investment and customer service
Inventory Turns equation
annual cost of sales/Average inventory level annual cost of goods sold/average inventory level
Class A
high annual dollar volume
Pipeline or in-transit stock
inventory that is en route between various fixed facilities in a logistics system such as a plant, warehouse, or store.
Class C
low annual dollar volume
grocery stores
may have 12 or more inventory turns per year or more
typical manufacturing companies
may have 6-8 inventory turns per year
Class B
medium annual dollar volume
Order qualifier
meeting a minimum standard to allow you to compete with other products and businesses
Speculative Stock
refers to inventory that is held for several reasons, including seasonal demand, projected price increases, and potential shortages of a product.
Safety or buffer stock
refers to inventory that is held in addition to cycle stock to guard against uncertainty in demand or lead time
Cycle or base stock
refers to inventory that is needed to satisfy normal demand during the course of an order cycle
Inventory
refers to stocks of goods and materials that are maintained to satisfy normal demand patterns