The Basics of Inventory Management (for People NOT Responsible for Inventory Management)

Post on 07-Jan-2016

22 views 1 download

Tags:

description

The Basics of Inventory Management (for People NOT Responsible for Inventory Management). Mark Tomalonis Principal WarehouseTWO, LLC. Three Questions. “Why is this NOT in stock?” “How did we end up with all of this surplus inventory?” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

transcript

© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

The Basics of Inventory Management(for People NOT Responsible for Inventory Management)

Mark TomalonisPrincipalWarehouseTWO, LLC

2© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Three Questions

1. “Why is this NOT in stock?”

2. “How did we end up with all of this surplus inventory?”

3. “What do you do for a living, inventory control person?”

3© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Workshop Topics

• To stock or not to stock?

• Inventory management performance metrics

• Basics of inventory management

• Answers to the three questions

4© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

To Stock or Not to Stock?

• Benefits & costs of stocking an item

• Benefits & costs of NOT stocking an item

• Finding a balance

• The cost of customer satisfaction

5© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Benefits & Costs of Stocking an Item

• x

• x

• x

• x

• x

6© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Benefits & Costs of NOT Stocking an Item

• x

• x

• x

• x

• x

7© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Finding a Balance

• (table comparing costs goes here)

8© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Management Performance Metrics

• SERVICE LEVEL

• how well you are meeting your customers’ expe

• ON-TIME-DELIVERY

• x

• TURNS

• x

9© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

The Cost of “Service Level”

0.000.010.020.030.040.050.060.070.080.090.100.110.120.130.140.150.160.170.180.190.200.210.220.230.240.250.260.270.280.290.300.310.320.330.340.350.360.370.380.390.400.410.420.430.440.450.460.470.480.490.500.510.520.530.540.550.560.570.580.590.600.610.620.630.640.650.660.670.680.690.700.710.720.730.740.750.760.770.780.790.800.810.820.830.840.850.860.870.880.890.900.910.920.930.940.950.960.970.980.991.000

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Service Level (ship from stock)

$C

os

t o

f S

erv

ice

Le

ve

l

Transactions Costs

Inventory Carrying Costs

Combined Costs

10© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

The Basics of Inventory Management

• Scope

• Four parameters that determine stocking disposition

• Possible item dispositions

• Stocking methods

• How much to stock? $ACOGS analysis

• Inventory plan decision flow chart

• Managing to Expectations✓

11© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Scope of Inventory Management

• x

• x

• x

• x

• x

12© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Four Parameters that Determine Stocking Disposition

• Unit cost

• Quantity sold (in one year)

• Number of times sold (in one year; “# of hits”)

• Who buys it (distribution of sales by customer)

13© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Four Parameters that Determine Stocking Method Examples

One-Year Metrics I II III IVUnit Cost $5 $5,000 $100 $500Quantity Sold 2000 2 100 100$ACOGS $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $50,000# of Hits 100 1 3 50% Sold to Top Customer 17% 100% 33% 90%

14© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Possible Item Dispositions (by # of Hits)

all items, sorted by decreasing # hits (in one year)

# h

its

(in

on

e ye

ar)

high medium slow inactive

15© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Management Terms

• ITEM (SKU)

• USAGE (forecasted demand)

• AMU (average monthly usage)

• ADU (average daily usage; AMU/30)

• HIT (order)

• LEAD TIME (average over multiple receipts)

• SAFETY STOCK (in days’ usage)

16© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Management Terms

• NET STOCK (NS)

= on hand (physically present)

- allocated (to an order, transfer, assembly)

- on backorder

+ on open purchase order (PO)

17© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Stocking Methods…

…tell you WHEN to buy

…tell you HOW MUCH to buy

18© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Stocking Methods

• Static (“minimum-maximum”)

• Dynamic (“Up-To”)

• Micro-Managed (high volume, high risk)

• Micro-Managed (exceptional circumstances)

• Non-stock (potential stock)

• Non-stock (not subject to being stocked EVER)

19© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Static Inventory Plan (“MIN-MAX”)

• “minimum-maximum” (“MIN-MAX”)

• two static control values, in quantities of the item

• Intended to be used for:

• infrequently sold items (e. g.: 3 to 6 “hits” per year)

• typical interval between “hits” is greater than lead time

20© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Static Inventory Plan (“MIN-MAX”)

• WHEN to buy

• net stock falls below “minimum” value (NS < MIN)

• “minimum” value is a multiple of average “hit” quantity

• HOW MUCH to buy

• “maximum” value minus net stock (MAX – NS)

• “maximum” value is a higher multiple of average “hit” quantity

• Demonstration…

21© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Static Inventory Plan (“MIN-MAX”)

• Effect on service level and turns

• “MIN” affects service level

• “MAX” affects “turns”

22© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Static Inventory Plan (“MIN-MAX”)

PROs

• easy to understand

• OK for slow-moving items

CONs

• does not adapt to changes in consumption or lead time

• easily misapplied to high usage items

• easily misapplied to items with long lead times✓

23© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Dynamic Inventory Plan (“Up-To”)

• “Up-To” (“UPTO”)

• control values are in days’ consumption, based on trailing average monthly usage

• Intended to be used for:

• frequently sold items (more than 6 “hits” per year)

• items for which consumption and/or lead time changes over time

24© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Dynamic Inventory Plan (“Up-To”)

• WHEN to buy

• net stock falls below “minimum” value (NS < MIN)

• “minimum” value is a multiple of average “hit” quantity

• HOW MUCH to buy

• “maximum” value minus net stock (MAX – NS)

• “maximum” value is a higher multiple of average “hit” quantity

• Demonstration…✓

25© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Dynamic Inventory Plan (“Up-To”)

• x

• x

• x

• Demonstration…

• OP affects service level

• OQ affects “turns”

26© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Dynamic Inventory Plan (“Up-To”)

PROs

• adapts to changes in consumption and lead time

• best tool to increase “turns’

CONs

• difficult to understand; not intuitive

• multiple control values to select (MS, SS)

27© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Micro-Managed Items:High Volume, High Risk

• Qualifiers

• item’s $ACOGS in top quartile of total $ACOGS

• top customer consumes 50%+ of item’s consumption

• Why it matters

• most common source of future surplus

• Recommended action

• review these items every month

• collaborate with customer (forecast)

28© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Micro-Managed Items:Exceptional Circumstances

• Qualifiers

• stocked per salesman’s request

• items consumed but not sold (Teflon tape)

• Why it matters

• potential for future surplus or unintended stock-out

• Recommended action

• isolate from computerized auto-reclassification

• manually review quarterly

29© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

How Much to Stock? $ACOGS Analysis

• x

• x

• x

• x

• Demonstration…

30© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Plan Constants by ABCD

• table to determine multiples of average order size (for min/max) or months’ supply and safety stock (for Up-To)

31© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Possible Item Dispositions (by # of Hits)

all items, sorted by decreasing # hits (in one year)

# h

its

(in

on

e ye

ar)

high medium slow inactive

NON-STOCKSTATIC

or

NON-STOCK

DYNAMIC

or

STATICDY

NA

MIC

32© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Quarterly Inventory Plan Method Selector (Concept)

Start

Recent &anticipated sales

activity?

Nonstock

Static Dynamic

Micro-Managed

Lots of hits?High $$$

mostly to onecustomer?

Specialcircumstances?

YES YES

YES

NO NO NO

NO

YES

33© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Quarterly Inventory Plan Method Selector (Example)

Start

last 6mo: 2+ hits?prev. 6mo: 1+ hits?future sales?

Nonstock

Static Dynamic

Micro-Managed

last 6mo: 4+ hits?$ACOGS > $25K?> 75% sales to one customer?

Stock request?New customer?Strategic item?Service item?

YES YES

YES

NO NO NO

NO

YES

34© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Four Parameters that Determine Stocking Method Examples

One-Year Metrics I II III IVUnit Cost $5 $5,000 $100 $500Quantity Sold 2000 2 100 100$ACOGS $10,000 $10,000 $10,000 $50,000# of Hits 100 1 3 50% Sold to Top Customer 17% 100% 33% 90%Disposition dynamic non-stock static micro-

managed

35© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Control Values

• Step 1: Define $ACOGS thresholds for ABCD classification

• (show screenshot of ABCD tool)

36© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Inventory Control Values

• Step 2: Define control values for statically and dynamically managed items, by ABCD classification

• (table that shows the above)

37© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Managing to Expectations

• Clearly define performance expectations

• service level

• on-time delivery

• turns

• Measure and review at least quarterly!

• measure by ABCD classification and inventory control method

• change ABCD threshold values and control values and then measure again…

38© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

What Could Possibly Go Wrong????

• You have assigned the responsibility of inventory management to the wrong person

• Item usage is not reviewed often enough

• Control values are not set correctly or reviewed

• How your ERP system works is not understood

• The tools in your ERP system are not used

39© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Who Makes a Good Inventory Manager?

• Pays attention to details

• Is a good puzzle solver (crosswords, Sudoku, etc.)

• Knows your ERP system and MS Excel

• Is comfortable saying “no”

• Is comfortable saying “no” to YOU

• Does not crave glory or attention

40© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Three Questions

1. “Why is this NOT in stock?”

2. “How did we end up with all of this surplus inventory?”

3. “What do you do for a living, inventory control person?”

41© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

“Why is this NOT in stock?”

• No stock plan

• Not enough sales history to justify a stock plan

• No “speculative” stock plan request submitted

• Bad stock plan

• Plan is not appropriate for current consumption rate

• Exceptional consumption ( ) or lead time ( )😃 😠

• Purchasing error

• You did not buy to stock plan

42© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

“How did we end up with all of this surplus inventory?”

• High volume high risk item was not “micro-managed”

• Bad stock plan

• Plan was not reviewed often enough

• Bad speculative stock request

• Periodic factory inventory returns not done

• Error in purchasing or order entry

43© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

“What do you do for a living, inventory control person?”

• “Inventory control” is NOT “purchasing”

• inventory control is PRO-active

• purchasing is RE-active

• Monthly tasks

• Quarterly tasks

• Annual tasks

• On-demand/periodical tasks

44© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

MONTHLY Inventory Control Tasks

• “Micro-manage” high volume, high risk items

• Review recent consumption

• Review forecasted consumption

• Consult with sales person

• Review inventory plan

• Review incoming POs

45© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

QUARTERLY Inventory Control Tasks

• Review inventory control metrics

• service level (availability from stock)

• on-time delivery

• inventory turns

46© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

QUARTERLY Inventory Control Tasks

• Review/reclassify all items in ERP database

• (flow chart)

• use automated tools (ERP tools or spreadsheet)

• Identify potential surplus items

• Review speculatively stocked items

47© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

ANNUAL Inventory Control Tasks

• Review/revise $ACOGS ABCD thresholds

• Review/revise MIN/MAX control values by ABCD class

• Review/revise OP, OQ and SSD control values by ABCD class

48© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

ON-DEMAND Inventory Control Tasks

• Item database maintenance

• part number, list price, cost, PO cost calculation

• Process new speculative stock requests

• Dispose of surplus inventory

• Annual inventory returns/exchanges

49© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Workshop Topics

• To stock or not to stock?

• Inventory management performance metrics

• Basics of inventory management

• Answers to the three questions

50© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Questions?

51© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Learn how “inventory-sharing” with over 250 other Eaton distributors can help you improve product availability for your customers, while reducing your own surplus Eaton inventory.

Visit us at Booth #7 in the Exhibitor Area.

Register an account at www.warehousetwo.com.

52© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Title

• x

• x

• x

• x

• x

53© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Title

• x

• x

• x

• x

• x

54© 2013 WarehouseTWO, LLC. All Rights Reserved..

Title

• This is our standard bulleted PowerPoint slide

• For more information on how to place text, images, graphs and charts on this slide template, please visit the Eaton Brand Center (via the Applications & Tools dropdown on JOE) and download our PowerPoint Style Guide under Templates