Inventory Accuracy: People, Processes, & Technology
Inventory Management isn't easy. If it were, more companies would be good at it. But being competent at managing your inventory isn't all that difficult either. It just requires that you invest the time to develop an understanding of the factors that should be affecting your inventory management decisions. Then use this understanding to start to put together the calculations and decision logic you will use to manage your inventory.
Explained. Calculations for forecasting, lot sizing, and safety stock are well known to the inventory management community, but are generally not understood to the level necessary to effectively use them. This lack of understanding results in incomplete calculations, incorrect inputs, flawed logic, or a fall-back to less effective, keep-it-simple approaches.
Inventory Management Explained helps readers build a solid understanding of the key planning aspects of inventory management. It does this by clearly explaining what inventory management is, but then goes well beyond typical inventory management books by tearing apart the calculations and logic we use in inventory management and exposing the hidden (or not so hidden) flaws and limitations. It then builds on this by showing readers how they can use their understanding of inventory management and their specific business needs to modify these calculations or develop their own calculations to more effectively manage their inventory. The emphasis on practical solutions means readers can actually use what they've learned.
For those new to inventory management, the author includes highly detailed explanations and numerous examples. Instead of archaic mathematical syntax, the author explains the calculations in plain English and uses Excel formulas and spreadsheet examples for many of them.
For the experienced practitioner, the author provides insights and a level of detail they likely have not previously experienced. Overall, Inventory Management Explained does actually explain inventory management, and in doing so, exposes the good, the bad, and the ugly aspects of it. But more importantly, it leaves the readers knowing enough to be able to start making smart decisions about how they manage their inventory.
Topics covered include:
- History-based forecasting methods including Exponential Smoothing, Adaptive Smoothing, Moving Average, and Weighted Moving Average.
- Seasonality Indexes , Trend Adjustments, and Forecast Overrides.
- Excel's Regression Analysis tool, Forecast Function, and Solver Add-in.
- Why Keep-it-simple methods for calculating safety stock don't work.
- The Normal Distribution model and why it applies to safety stock calculations.
- How to modify your safety stock calculation to account for your forecast, lead time, and order cycles.
- What EOQ is, where it came from, and what all the numbers mean.
- What goes into Order Cost and Carrying Cost.
- Setting up an order quantity calculation in Excel that takes into account Quantity Discounts.
- Dealing with seasonality and trend in your order quantity calculations.
- Periodic Review, Fixed Order Point, Min-Max, Multi-bin, Kanban, and ordering systems that directly utilize your forecast.
- The real difference between Push Systems and Pull Systems.
- Materials Requirements Planning (MRP) and Distribution Requirements Planning (DRP)
- Gross Requirements, Net Requirements, Planned Orders, Bills of Materials, Routings, Master Production Scheduling (MPS)
- How to put together an effective Fair-Share Distribution system.
- Fill Rates, On-Time Delivery, ABC stratification, Out-of-stock analysis, Excess and Obsolete inventory.
Country | USA |
Author | David J. Piasecki |
Binding | Hardcover |
Brand | Brand: Ops Publishing |
EAN | 9780972763110 |
Edition | 1st |
Feature | Used Book in Good Condition |
ISBN | 0972763112 |
IsEligibleForTradeIn | 1 |
Label | Ops Publishing |
Manufacturer | Ops Publishing |
NumberOfItems | 1 |
NumberOfPages | 352 |
PublicationDate | 2009-03-01 |
Publisher | Ops Publishing |
Studio | Ops Publishing |
ReleaseDate | 0000-00-00 |