Inventory Management
Inventory Management
Inventory Management
Reference Text:
▪ Inventory is an array of raw materials, partially finished goods, finished goods (both, in-
stock & in-transit).
▪ Inventory can include small things (such as safety pins) to large items (such as trucks
and airplanes).
Different Types of Inventory
The different kinds of inventories include :
1. Record Keeping
■ Have reasonable estimates of inventory holding costs, ordering cost, and shortage costs
You are managing a particular item. The item is important enough to your customers that you want to
carry enough inventory to avoid stocking out. However, the item is also expensive enough that you also
want to minimize the amount of cash tied up in inventory. The process of ordering replenishment stock
is expensive and cumbersome that you also want to minimize the number of purchase orders. You also
have a limited space in your organization to store the items. Demand for the item is unpredictable.
Average Inventory
= Q/2 =175
Basic EOQ Model
Assumptions:
– Annual demand is known and demand rate is
constant
– Inventory ordering and usage occur in cycles.
– Ordering costs are constant
– Price per unit is constant
– The usage rate and the lead time do not vary
– The order will be received at the precise instant that
the inventory on hand falls to zero
– Inventory holding cost is based on average inventory
– All demand for the product will be satisfied (i.e., no
backorders are allowed)
– There are no quantity discounts
Order Size Vs Order Frequency
Order Size is Inversely Proportional to Order Frequency
Q1
Inventory
Average
Q1/2
Q2
Inventory
Q2/2
Average
Basic EOQ Model
Identify a fixed order size that minimizes the annual inventory
ordering cost and carrying cost
Ordering Cost
Carrying Cost
Ordering Cost
Assumptions:
– Annual demand is known and demand rate is constant
– Inventory ordering and usage occur in cycles.
– Ordering costs are constant
– Price per unit is constant What if we relaxing this assumption of the basic EOQ Model ?
– The usage rate and the lead time do not vary
– The order will be received at the precise instant that the inventory on hand falls to zero
– Inventory holding cost is based on average inventory
– All demand for the product will be satisfied (i.e., no backorders are allowed)
– There are no quantity discounts
■ Given: Annual Demand (D) = 1000 units
Purchase cost
Quantity Discounts
■ Determination of EOQ does not involve the purchasing cost because of the assumption that
under no quantity discounts, price per unit is the same for all order sizes.
■ If quantity discounts are available, Manager must think of the following concerns:
– Availability of storage space for additional items
– Issue of obsolescence and deterioration
– Availability of fund to invest in additional inventory
Quantity Discounts
■ When quantity discounts are offered, there is a
separate U-shaped total-cost curve for each unit
price. Each curve will apply to a portion of the
range.
Given: D = 816 cases per year; S = $12; H = $4 per case per year
Given: D = 816 cases per year; S = $12; H = $4 per case per year
Feasible ??
Optimal Order
Quantity = 840
Total Cost = $3686