Inventory
those stocks or items used to support production, supporting activities, and customer service. Demand for inventory may be dependent and independent. Inventory fluctuations are anticipation, hedge, cycle, fluctuation, transportation and service parts. Inventory represents 20-60% of all assets on an organization’s books
Inventory management
the branch of business management concerned with planning and controlling inventories. Takes place at two levels: aggregate and item. Aggregate inventory management is part of long-term planning
Item inventory management translates aggregate inventory policies into specific inventory control decisions at specific inventory locations. Includes determining desired levels of cycle stock and safety stock, and how and when to replenish inventory, such as push or pull replenishment
Decoupling inventory
an amount of inventory maintained between entities in a manufacturing or distribution network to create independence between processes or entities. The objective is to disconnect the rate of use from the rate of supply of the item. occurs with end units in MTS environments, with components or subassemblies in ATO environments, and perhaps with raw materials in MTO or ETO environments. Purpose is to reduce supply lead times or lead time uncertainty
Types of inventory
Raw materials. WIP. Finished goods. Distribution inventory. Maintenance and repair. Service parts
Lot-size inventory
inventory that results whenever quantity price discounts, shipping costs, setup costs, or similar considerations make it more economical to purchase or produce in larger lots than are needed for immediate purposes
Hedge inventory
a form of inventory buildup to buffer against some event that may not happen. Potential labor strike, price increases, unsettled governments, and events that could severely impair a company’s strategic initiatives
Classifications of inventory
Excess inventory, Distressed goods, obsolete, scrap, rework
inventory in service industries
The form of goods that facilitate the delivery of the service to customers. Ex with airplane, seat, food and beverages, maintenance parts
You can have excess inventory. Movie theater with unsold seats
Wall-to-wall inventory
an inventory management technique in which material enters a plant and is processed through the plant into finished goods without ever having entered a formal stock area
o Understand tradeoffs in stocking levels, customer service, environmental impact, and inventory accuracy targets
Customer service wants more inventory. Operations wants long production runs and less changeovers to be most efficient- need to have good inventory accuracy to help customer service. Finance wants least amount of inventory costs
sourcing risks on inventory planning decisions
Sourcing risks can have a strong impact on an organization’s inventory planning, and, especially considering global sourcing, can include the full PESTEL range of risks- political, economic, social, technological, environmental, legal
ABC classification
the classification of a group of items in decreasing order of annual dollar volume or other criteria. The A group usually represent 10-20% by number of items and 50-70% by projected dollar volume. Group B usually represents about 20% of the items and 20% of the dollar volume. Group C contains 60-70% of the items and represents about 10-30% of the dollar volume
* 80/20 rule- 20% of volume is 80% of revenue
o Determine item segmentation for special inventory
Bulk, odd-sized, temperature, value, variety, cross-contamination, hazardous goods
Item cost
the purchase price plus other direct costs required to get the units to where they need to be. Include transportation, customers, and insurance. If produced in-house, include the direct materials, direct labor, and portion of factory overhead
Carrying costs
cost of holding inventory, usually defined as a percentage of the dollar value of inventory per unit of time. Depends mainly on the cost of capital invested as well as costs of maintain the inventory such as taxes and insurance, obsolescence, spoilage, and space occupied. Normally vary from 10-35% annually
sum of capital, storage, and risks costs / total value of the inventory for the period
Ordering costs
the costs that increase as the number of orders placed increases. Used in calculating order quantities. Includes costs related to the clerical work of preparing, releasing, monitoring, and receiving orders; the physical handling of goods; inspections; and setup costs. Related to the number of orders per period, not the volume
* Average ordering cost per order = (fixed cost/number of order) + variable cost
Capacity-related costs-
when there is sustained shift in demand that requires production plans (OT, hiring and layoffs, costs for unused capacity, etc)
Risk pooling
a method often associated with the management of inventory risk. Manufacturers and retailers that experience high variability in demand for their products can pool together common inventory components associated with a broad family of products to buffer the overall burden of having to deploy inventory for each discrete product. Assumption is that when demand is unexpectedly high in one location, it will rarely be high in the other locations as well. Balances out the area of higher demand, resulting in lower overall variability
o Differentiate managerial accounting from financial accounting
Financial accounting- concerned with providing information outside the organization
Managerial account- used to provide information to internal users, those who need to plan, make investment decisions, and assess financial key performance indicators. A branch of accounting that used techniques such as break-even analysis, cost-volume-profit analysis, make-buy analysis, and others to provide information used in day-to-day decision making
Balance sheet
a financial statement showing the resources owned, debt owed, and the owner’s share of a company at a given point in time
Liabilities
represents debts or obligations owed by a company to credits
Owners’ equity
represents the residual claim by the company’s owners or shareholders, or both, to the company’s assets less its liabilities
=assets – liabilities
Assets=
liabilities + owners’ equity
Income statement
a financial statement showing the net income for a business over a given period of time