NIT Hamirpur: Inventory Management Inventory Management
NIT Hamirpur: Inventory Management Inventory Management
NIT Hamirpur: Inventory Management Inventory Management
Inventory Management
ME-474(b) Production Planning and Control Dr. Divya Pandey
Plan
Introduction to Inventory Management Types of Inventories Objectives of Inventory Control ABC Classification Inventory related Costs Inventory Models Economic Order Quantity
Types of Inventories
Raw materials Components (purchased parts) Partially completed goods: work in progress (WIP) Finished Goods M.R.O. (Maintenance, Repairs and Operating supplies) Goods-in-transit to warehouses or customers
Functions of Inventory
To maintain sufficient stock of raw material in the period of short supply and anticipate price changes. To ensure a continuous supply of material to production department facilitating uninterrupted production. To minimize the carrying cost and time. To maintain sufficient stock of finished goods for smooth sales operations. To ensure that materials are available for use in production and production services as and when required. To ensure that finished goods are available for delivery to customers to fulfil orders, smooth sales operation and efficient customer service.
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
Functions of Inventory
To minimize investment in inventories and minimize the carrying cost and time. To protect the inventory against obsolescence and unauthorized use. deterioration,
To maintain sufficient stock of raw material in period of short supply and anticipate price changes. To control investment in inventories and keep it at an optimum level.
Dependent demand
Independent demand finished goods, items that are ready to be sold E.g. a computer Dependent demand components of finished products
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
ABC Analysis
Percentage of dollar usage value
100 90 Class A 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 10
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
Class B
Class C
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90 100
10
Percentage of items
10 to 15 % 25 to 30 % 30 to 50 % 70 to 80 % 15 to 20 %
Rigourous Precise with constant revisions Normal Normal
5 to 10 %
Simple Periodical
11
Part 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Unit Cost Annual Usage 2700 15750 1350 3600 1350 900 450 14400 22950 900 90 40 130 60 100 180 170 50 60 120
12
A class items Use of Continuous review B class items Periodic review C class items simple rules of thumb
13
14
15
16
How to use EOQ in your organization How much inventory should we order each month?
The EOQ tool can be used to model the amount of inventory that we should order each month.
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
17
18
Acquisition Cost
19
Category Value
% of Inventory
6% 3% 3% 11% 3% 26%
20
Housing (building) cost Material handling costs Labor cost Inventory investment costs Pilferage, scrap, & obsolescence Total holding cost
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
Interest
Obsolescence
Storage
21
Ordering Cost
Order processing Supplies / Forms Clerical support Receiving / Inspection Follow up / Expediting For manufacturing
Clean-up cost Re-tooling cost Adjustment cost
22
Shortage Cost
Reputation of the company; Loss of orders / profits Increase in the costs: Overtime/ sub-contracting Additional delivery Purchasing price premium Idle machinery and human resources Etc
23
Inventory Models
24
Inventory Models
25
Inventory Models
26
Inventory Models
27
ANALYIS
Broad Approach Identify the cost component in each cycle (of length t) Carrying cost, shortage cost, setup or order cost Express cost in terms of decision variables (order quantity and backorder level) Develop annul cost multiplying (1) by number of cycles/year Optimize to find out optimal value of q and b.
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
28
Inventory Models
Inventory Level
Order Quantity (large Q)
Time
29
30
31
32
Q D TC = H + S + D C 2 Q
Annual Holding Cost Order of set-up cost Total acquisition cost
TC : Total annual cost D : Total annual demand Q : Quantity ordered H : Unit holding cost S : Order or set-up cost C: Unit cost (price)
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
33
Q H 2
D S Q
EOQ
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
QUANTITY (UNITS)
34
Q D TC = H + S + D C 2 Q
Taking the derivative of both sides of the equation and setting equal to zero to find the minimum value of the function, one obtains:
dTC (Q ) d Q D H + S + DC = 0 = dQ dQ 2 Q
35
E.O.Q. - Example
A toy manufacturer uses approximately 32 000 silicone pieces per year. The pieces are used at a constant rate over 240 working days each year. Annual holding cost is 0,6$/u and ordering cost is 24$. Determine the economic order quantity as well as the total annual cost of this item.
= 1600 pieces
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
36
E.O.Q. Example
Omega is a company which manufactures megaphones. The company buys its speakers at a cost of $ 20 each. With each order, Omega must spend $ 50 (preparation of the purchase order, delivery, receiving, etc...). The annual demand for speakers is 10 000 units and the annual carrying cost is 20 % of the unit cost. Which quantity would minimize the annual total cost?
37
MRP
Detailed scheduled for RAWMATERIALS & COMPONENTS used in the end products
38
MRP
39
MRP
Dependent Demand
Demand directly related to demand of some other product (components, raw materials, subassemblies) Requirements derived from delivery schedule of end items. MRP is appropriate tool for planning & control of manufacturing inventories
Raw material WIP Component parts subassemblies
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
40
MRP
Lead Time
Ordering Lead time (for Purchase pars)
41
MRP
Manufacturing Lead time In MRP, lead times are used to determine starting dates for assembling final products and subassemblies, for producing component parts, and for ordering raw materials.
Place Order
Process part through sequence of Item Delivered machines as given on route sheet.
42
Inputs to MRP
The master production schedule and other order data. The bill of materials files. (the product structure) The inventory record file.
43
MRP
COMMON USE ITTEMS MRP collects the common use items from different products to effect economics in ordering the raw materials and manufacturing the components/subassemblies.
44
BOM
Lead Times (Item Master File) Inventory Data
MRP by Period Report MRP by date report Planned order report Purchase advice Exception report
Inventory Transaction
Exception report
45
46
47
Inventory Record Files Accurate current data on inventory status Generally computerized (item master files) Lead times must be established in inventory record files Inventory transactions (issues, arrivals, order placement, realization) must be kept current.
48
7 70
8 50 80
9 25
10 100
49
Gross Requirements Scheduled Receipts On Hand 50 Net Requirements Planned Receipts Planned order releases
40 90
Manufacturing C4=2
ordering M4=3
50
Basic MRP Logic Input MPS, BOM, Inventory status, lead times Do parts Explosion Offset requirements by lead times Netting of requirements from gross by considering availabilities Lot sizing of net requirements procurement or production.
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
for
51
MRP Example
52
MRP. Example
53
MRP Example
54
55
56
Benefits of MRP Reduction in inventory (30-50% in WIP) Improved customer service (late orders reduced by 90%) Quicker response to changes in demand and master schedule. Greater productivity Reduced setup and product changeover cost Better machine utilization Increased sales and reduction in sales price.
2-508-97 Production and Operations Management
57
58