1 / 46

Chapter 3 Inventory Management

Chapter 3 Inventory Management. In Supply Chains. Outline of the Presentation. Introduction to Inventory Management The Effect of Demand Uncertainty (s,S) Policy Risk Pooling Centralized vs. Decentralized Systems Practical Issues in Inventory Management. Inventory.

chava
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 3 Inventory Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 3Inventory Management In Supply Chains

  2. Outline of the Presentation • Introduction to Inventory Management • The Effect of Demand Uncertainty • (s,S) Policy • Risk Pooling • Centralized vs. Decentralized Systems • Practical Issues in Inventory Management

  3. Inventory • Where do we hold inventory? • Suppliers and manufacturers • warehouses and distribution centers • retailers • Types of Inventory • WIP • raw materials • finished goods • Why do we hold inventory? • Economies of scale • Uncertainty in supply and demand

  4. Goals:Reduce Cost, Improve Service • By effectively managing inventory: • Xerox eliminated $700 million inventory from its supply chain • Wal-Mart became the largest retail company utilizing efficient inventory management • GM has reduced parts inventory and transportation costs by 26% annually

  5. Goals:Reduce Cost, Improve Service • By not managing inventory successfully • In 1994, “IBM continues to struggle with shortages in their ThinkPad line” (WSJ, Oct 7, 1994) • In 1993, “Liz Claiborne said its unexpected earning decline is the consequence of higher than anticipated excess inventory” (WSJ, July 15, 1993) • In 1993, “Dell Computers predicts a loss; Stock plunges. Dell acknowledged that the company was sharply off in its forecast of demand, resulting in inventory write downs” (WSJ, August 1993)

  6. Understanding Inventory • The inventory policy is affected by: • Demand Characteristics • Lead Time • Number of Products • Objectives • Service level • Minimize costs • Cost Structure

  7. Cost Structure • Order costs • Fixed • Variable • Holding Costs • Insurance • Maintenance and Handling • Taxes • Opportunity Costs • Obsolescence

  8. EOQ: A Simple Model • Book Store Mug Sales • Demand is constant, at 20 units a week • Fixed order cost of $12.00, no lead time • Holding cost of 25% of inventory value annually • Mugs cost $1.00, sell for $5.00 • Question • How many, when to order?

  9. EOQ: A View of Inventory Note: • No Stockouts • Order when no inventory • Order Size determines policy Inventory Order Size Avg. Inven Time

  10. EOQ: Calculating Total Cost • Purchase Cost Constant • Holding Cost: (Avg. Inven) * (Holding Cost) • Ordering (Setup Cost): Number of Orders * Order Cost • Goal: Find the Order Quantity that Minimizes These Costs:

  11. EOQ:Total Cost Annual Cost Total Cost Curve Holding Cost Order (Setup) Cost Order Quantity Optimal Order Quantity (Q*)

  12. EOQ: Optimal Order Quantity • Optimal Quantity (Q): • So for our problem, the optimal quantity is 316

  13. EOQ: Important Observations • Tradeoff between set-up costs and holding costs when determining order quantity. In fact, we order so that these costs are equal per unit time • Total Cost is not particularly sensitive to the optimal order quantity

  14. The Effect of Demand Uncertainty • Most companies treat the world as if it were predictable: • Production and inventory planning are based on forecasts of demand made far in advance of the selling season • Companies are aware of demand uncertainty when they create a forecast, but they design their planning process as if the forecast truly represents reality • Recent technological advances have increased the level of demand uncertainty: • Short product life cycles • Increasing product variety

  15. Demand Forecasts • The three principles of all forecasting techniques: • Forecasting is always wrong • The longer the forecast horizon the worst is the forecast • Aggregate forecasts are more accurate

  16. (s, S) Policies • For some starting inventory levels, it is better to not start production • If we start, we always produce to the same level • Thus, we use an (s,S) policy. If the inventory level is below s, we produce up to S. • s is the reorder point, and S is the order-up-to level • The difference between the two levels is driven by the fixed costs associated with ordering, transportation, or manufacturing

  17. A Multi-Period Inventory Model • Often, there are multiple reorder opportunities • Consider a central distribution facility which orders from a manufacturer and delivers to retailers. The distributor periodically places orders to replenish its inventory

  18. Case Study: Electronic Component Distributor • Electronic Component Distributor • Parent company HQ in Japan with world-wide manufacturing • All products manufactured by parent company • One central warehouse in U.S.

  19. Supply Chain and Product Flow

  20. Demand Variability: Example 1

  21. Demand Variability: Example 1

  22. Reminder:The Normal Distribution Standard Deviation = 5 Standard Deviation = 10 Average = 30

  23. The distributor holds inventory to: • Satisfy demand during lead time • Protect against demand uncertainty • Balance fixed costs and holding costs

  24. The Multi-Period Inventory Model • Normally distributed random demand • Fixed order cost plus a cost proportional to amount ordered. • Inventory cost is charged per item per unit time • If an order arrives and there is no inventory, the order is lost • The distributor has a required service level. This is expressed as the the likelihood that the distributor will not stock out during lead time. • Intuitively, what will a good policy look like?

  25. A View of (s, S) Policy S Inventory Position Lead Time Lead Time Inventory Level s 0 Time

  26. The (s,S) Policy • (s, S) Policy: Whenever the inventory position drops below a certain level, s, we order to raise the inventory position to level S. • The reorder point is a function of: • The Lead Time • Average demand • Demand variability • Service level

  27. Notation • AVG = average daily demand • STD = standard deviation of daily demand • LT = replenishment lead time in days • h = holding cost of one unit for one day • SL = service level (for example, 95%). This implies that the probability of stocking out is 100%-SL (for example, 5%) • Also, the Inventory Position at any time is the actual inventory plus items already ordered, but not yet delivered.

  28. Analysis • The reorder point has two components: • To account for average demand during lead time:LTAVG • To account for deviations from average (we call this safety stock) where z is chosen from statistical tables to ensure that the probability of stockouts during leadtime is100%-SL.

  29. Example • The distributor has historically observed weekly demand of: AVG = 44.6 STD = 32.1Replenishment lead time is 2 weeks, and desired service level SL = 97% • Average demand during lead time is: 44.6  2 = 89.2 • Safety Stock is:1.88  32.1  2 = 85.3 • Reorder point is thus 175, or about 3.9 weeks of supply at warehouse and in the pipeline

  30. Model Two: Fixed Costs • In addition to previous costs, a fixed cost K is paid every time an order is placed. • We have seen that this motivates an (s,S) policy, where reorder point and order quantity are different. • The reorder point will be the same as the previous model, in order to meet meet the service requirement: What about the order up to level?

  31. Model Two: The Order-Up-To Level • We have used the EOQ model to balance fixed, variable costs: If there was no variability in demand, we would order Q when inventory level was at LT AVG. Why? • There is variability, so we need safety stock • The total order-up-to level is:

  32. Model Two: Example • Consider the previous example, but with the following additional info: • fixed cost of $4500 when an order is placed • $250 product cost • holding cost 18% of product • Weekly holding cost:h = (.18  250) / 52 = 0.87 • Order quantity Order-up-to level:s + Q = 85 + 679 = 765

  33. Risk Pooling • Consider these two systems: Market One Warehouse One Supplier Warehouse Two Market Two Market One Warehouse Supplier Market Two

  34. Risk Pooling • For the same service level, which system will require more inventory? Why? • For the same total inventory level, which system will have better service? Why? • What are the factors that affect these answers?

  35. Risk Pooling Example • Compare the two systems: • two products • maintain 97% service level • $60 order cost • $.27 weekly holding cost • $1.05 transportation cost per unit in decentralized system, $1.10 in centralized system • 1 week lead time

  36. Risk Pooling Example

  37. Risk Pooling Example

  38. Risk Pooling Example

  39. Risk Pooling:Important Observations • Centralizing inventory control reduces both safety stock and average inventory level for the same service level. • This works best for • High coefficient of variation, which reduces required safety stock. • Negatively correlated demand. Why? • What other kinds of risk pooling will we see?

  40. Risk Pooling:Types of Risk Pooling • Risk Pooling Across Markets • Risk Pooling Across Products • Risk Pooling Across Time • Daily order up to quantity is: • LTAVG + z  AVG  LT Orders 10 11 12 13 14 15 Demands

  41. To Centralize or not to Centralize • What is the effect on: • Safety stock? • Service level? • Overhead? • Lead time? • Transportation Costs?

  42. Centralized Systems Supplier Warehouse Retailers

  43. Decentralized System Supplier Warehouses Retailers

  44. Centralized Distribution Systems • Question: How much inventory should management keep at each location? • A good strategy: • The retailer raises inventory to level Sr each period • The supplier raises the sum of inventory in the retailer and supplier warehouses and in transit to Ss • If there is not enough inventory in the warehouse to meet all demands from retailers, it is allocated so that the service level at each of the retailers will be equal.

  45. Inventory Management: Best Practice • Periodic inventory review policy (59%) • Tight management of usage rates, lead times and safety stock (46%) • ABC approach (37%) • Reduced safety stock levels (34%) • Shift more inventory, or inventory ownership, to suppliers (31%) • Quantitative approaches (33%)

  46. Inventory Turn Over Ratios

More Related