Inventory
Management
12
PowerPoint presentation to accompany
Heizer, Render, Munson
Operations Management, Thirteenth Edition, Global Edition
Principles of Operations Management, Twelfth Edition
PowerPoint slides by Jeff Heyl
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Outline
► Global Company Profile: Amazon.com
► The Importance of Inventory
► Managing Inventory
► Inventory Models
► Inventory Models for Independent
Demand
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Outline - Continued
► Probabilistic Models and
Safety Stock
► Single-Period Model
► Fixed-Period (P) Systems
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Inventory Management at
Amazon.com
► Amazon.com started as a “virtual”
retailer – no inventory, no warehouses,
no overhead – just computers taking
orders to be filled by others
► Growth has forced Amazon.com to
become a world leader in warehousing
and inventory management
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Inventory Management at
Amazon.com
1. Each order is assigned by computer to one of
the distribution centers
2. A “flow meister” at each distribution center
assigns work crews
3. Robots and technology help workers move
merchandise and pick the correct items
4. Items are placed into crates on a conveyor,
bar code scanners scan each item 15 times
to virtually eliminate errors
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Inventory Management at
Amazon.com
5. Crates arrive at central point where items
are boxed and labeled with new bar code
6. Order arrives at customer within 1 - 2 days
Amazon expects the customer experience to
yield the lowest price, fastest delivery, and
error-free order fulfillment
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Learning Objectives
When you complete this chapter you
should be able to:
12.1 Conduct an ABC analysis
12.2 Explain and use cycle counting
12.3 Explain and use the EOQ model
for independent inventory demand
12.4 Compute a reorder point and
explain safety stock
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Learning Objectives
When you complete this chapter you
should be able to:
12.5 Apply the production order quantity
model
12.6 Explain and use the quantity
discount model
12.7 Understand service levels and
probabilistic inventory models
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Inventory Management
The objective of inventory
management is to strike a balance
between inventory investment and
customer service
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Importance of Inventory
▶ One of the most expensive assets of many
companies representing as much as 50%
of total invested capital
▶ Less inventory lowers costs but increases
chances of shortages which might stop
processes or result in dissatisfied
customers
▶ More inventory raises costs but improves
the likelihood of meeting process and
customer demands
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Functions of Inventory
1. To provide a selection of goods for
anticipated demand and to separate
the firm from fluctuations in demand
2. To decouple or separate various
parts of the production process
3. To take advantage of quantity
discounts
4. To hedge against inflation
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Types of Inventory
▶ Raw material
▶ Purchased but not processed
▶ Work-in-process (WIP)
▶ Undergone some change but not completed
▶ A function of flow time for a product
▶ Maintenance/repair/operating (MRO)
▶ Necessary to keep machinery and processes
productive
▶ Finished goods
▶ Completed product awaiting shipment
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The Material Flow Cycle
Flow time
95% 5%
Input Wait for Wait to Move Wait in queue Setup Run Output
inspection be moved time for operator time time
Figure 12.1
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Managing Inventory
1) How inventory items can be classified
(ABC analysis)
2) How accurate inventory records can
be maintained
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ABC Analysis
▶ Divides inventory into three classes based
on annual dollar volume
▶ Class A - high annual dollar volume
▶ Class B - medium annual dollar volume
▶ Class C - low annual dollar volume
▶ Used to establish policies that focus on the
few critical parts and not the many trivial
ones
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Percentage of annual dollar usage ABC Analysis
Figure 12.2
A Items
80 –
70 –
60 –
50 –
40 –
30 –
20 – B Items
10 – C Items
0 – | | | | | | | | | |
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Percentage of inventory items
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ABC Analysis
ABC Calculation
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
PERCENTAGE PERCENTAGE
ITEM OF NUMBER OF ANNUAL ANNUAL OF ANNUAL
STOCK ITEMS VOLUME UNIT DOLLAR DOLLAR
NUMBER STOCKED (UNITS) x COST = VOLUME VOLUME CLASS
#10286 20% 1,000 $ 90.00 $ 90,000 38.8% A
72%
#11526 500 154.00 77,000 33.2% A
#12760 1,550 17.00 26,350 11.3% B
#10867 30% 350 42.86 15,001 6.4% 23% B
#10500 1,000 12.50 12,500 5.4% B
#12572 600 14.17 8,502 3.7% C
#14075 2,000 .60 1,200 .5% C
#01036 50% 100 8.50 850 .4% 5% C
#01307 1,200 .42 504 .2% C
#10572 250 .60 150 .1% C
8,550 $232,057 100.0%
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ABC Analysis
▶ Other criteria than annual dollar volume
may be used
▶ High shortage or holding cost
▶ Anticipated engineering changes
▶ Delivery problems
▶ Quality problems
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ABC Analysis
▶ Policies employed may include
1. More emphasis on supplier development
for A items
2. Tighter physical inventory control for
A items
3. More care in forecasting A items
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Record Accuracy
► Accurate records are a
critical ingredient in
production and inventory
systems
► Periodic systems require
regular checks of inventory
► Two-bin system
► Perpetual inventory tracks receipts
and subtractions on a continuing basis
► May be semi-automated
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Record Accuracy
► Incoming and outgoing
record keeping must be
accurate
► Stockrooms should be
secure
► Necessary to make precise decisions
about ordering, scheduling, and
shipping
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Cycle Counting
▶ Items are counted and records updated on
a periodic basis
▶ Often used with ABC analysis
▶ Has several advantages
1. Eliminates shutdowns and interruptions
2. Eliminates annual inventory adjustment
3. Trained personnel audit inventory accuracy
4. Allows causes of errors to be identified and
corrected
5. Maintains accurate inventory records
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Cycle Counting Example
5,000 items in inventory, 500 A items, 1,750 B items, 2,750 C
items
Policy is to count A items every month (20 working days), B items
every quarter (60 days), and C items every six months (120 days)
CYCLE
ITEM COUNTING NUMBER OF ITEMS
CLASS QUANTITY POLICY COUNTED PER DAY
A 500 Each month 500/20 = 25/day
B 1,750 Each quarter 1,750/60 = 29/day
C 2,750 Every 6 months 2,750/120 = 23/day
77/day
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Control of Service Inventories
▶ Can be a critical component of profitability
▶ Losses may come from shrinkage or
pilferage
▶ Applicable techniques include
1. Good personnel selection, training, and
discipline
2. Tight control of incoming shipments
3. Effective control of all goods leaving facility
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Inventory Models
▶ Independent demand - the demand for
item is independent of the demand for any
other item in inventory
▶ Dependent demand - the demand for
item is dependent upon the demand for
some other item in the inventory
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Inventory Models
▶ Holding costs - the costs of holding or
“carrying” inventory over time
▶ Ordering cost - the costs of placing an
order and receiving goods
▶ Setup cost - cost to prepare a machine or
process for manufacturing an order
▶ May be highly correlated with setup time
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Holding Costs
TABLE 12.1 Determining Inventory Holding Costs
COST (AND RANGE)
AS A PERCENTAGE
OF INVENTORY
CATEGORY VALUE
Housing costs (building rent or depreciation, 6% (3 - 10%)
operating costs, taxes, insurance)
Material handling costs (equipment lease or 3% (1 - 3.5%)
depreciation, power, operating cost)
Labor cost (receiving, warehousing, security) 3% (3 - 5%)
Investment costs (borrowing costs, taxes, and 11% (6 - 24%)
insurance on inventory)
Pilferage, space, and obsolescence (much 3% (2 - 5%)
higher in industries undergoing rapid change like
tablets and smart phones)
Overall carrying cost 26%
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Holding Costs
TABLE 12.1 Determining Inventory Holding Costs
COST (AND RANGE)
AS A PERCENTAGE
OF INVENTORY
CATEGORY VALUE
Housing costs (building rent or depreciation, 6% (3 - 10%)
operating costs, taxes, insurance)
Material handling costs (equipment lease or 3% (1 - 3.5%)
depreciation, power, operating cost)
Labor cost (receiving, warehousing, security) 3% (3 - 5%)
Investment costs (borrowing costs, taxes, and 11% (6 - 24%)
insurance on inventory)
Pilferage, space, and obsolescence (much 3% (2 - 5%)
higher in industries undergoing rapid change like
PCs and cell phones)
Overall carrying cost 26%
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Inventory Models for
Independent Demand
Need to determine when and
how much to order
1. Basic economic order quantity
(EOQ) model
2. Production order quantity model
3. Quantity discount model
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Basic EOQ Model
Important assumptions
1. Demand is known, constant, and independent
2. Lead time is known and constant
3. Receipt of inventory is instantaneous and
complete
4. Quantity discounts are not possible
5. Only variable costs are setup (or ordering)
and holding
6. Stockouts can be completely avoided
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Inventory Usage Over Time
Figure 12.3
Total order received
Average
Order Usage rate inventory
quantity = Q
Inventory level
on hand
(maximum Q
inventory
level) 2
Minimum
inventory 0
Time
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Minimizing Costs
Objective is to minimize total costs
Table 12.4(c)
Total cost of
holding and
setup (order)
Minimum
total cost
Annual cost
Holding cost
Setup (order) cost
Optimal order Order quantity
quantity (Q*)
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Minimizing Costs
▶ By minimizing the sum of setup (or
ordering) and holding costs, total costs are
minimized
▶ Optimal order size Q* will minimize total
cost
▶ A reduction in either cost reduces the total
cost
▶ Optimal order quantity occurs when
holding cost and setup cost are equal
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Minimizing Costs
The necessary steps are:
1. Develop an expression for setup or
ordering cost
2. Develop an expression for holding cost
3. Set setup (order) cost equal to holding
cost
4. Solve the equation for the optimal order
quantity.
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Minimizing Costs
Q = Number of units per order
Q* = Optimal number of units per order (EOQ)
D = Annual demand in units for the inventory item
S = Setup or ordering cost for each order
H = Holding or carrying cost per unit per year
Annual setup cost = (Number of orders placed per year)
× (Setup or order cost per order)
Annual demand Setup or order
=
Number of units in each order cost per order
æ Dö
= ç ÷S
èQø
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Minimizing Costs D
Annual setup cost = S
Q
Q = Number of pieces per order
Q* = Optimal number of pieces per order (EOQ)
D = Annual demand in units for the inventory item
S = Setup or ordering cost for each order
H = Holding or carrying cost per unit per year
Annual setup cost = (Number of orders placed per year)
× (Setup or order cost per order)
Annual demand Setup or order
=
Number of units in each order cost per order
æ Dö
= ç ÷S
èQø
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Minimizing Costs D
Annual setup cost = S
Q
Q
Q = Number of pieces per order Annual holding cost = H
2
Q* = Optimal number of pieces per order (EOQ)
D = Annual demand in units for the inventory item
S = Setup or ordering cost for each order
H = Holding or carrying cost per unit per year
Annual holding cost = (Average inventory level)
× (Holding cost per unit per year)
Order quantity
= (Holding cost per unit per year)
2
æQö
= ç ÷H
è2ø
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Minimizing Costs D
Annual setup cost = S
Q
Q
Q = Number of pieces per order Annual holding cost = H
2
Q* = Optimal number of pieces per order (EOQ)
D = Annual demand in units for the inventory item
S = Setup or ordering cost for each order
H = Holding or carrying cost per unit per year
Optimal order quantity is found when annual setup
cost equals annual holding cost
æ Dö æQ ö Solving for Q* 2DS = Q 2 H
ç ÷S = ç ÷ H 2DS
èQø è2ø Q2 =
H
2DS
Q* =
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H 12 - 38
An EOQ Example
Determine optimal number of needles to order
D = 1,000 units - demand
S = $10 per order - setup cost
H = $.50 per unit per year - holding cost
2DS
Q* =
H
2(1,000)(10)
Q = *
= 40,000 = 200 units
0.50
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An EOQ Example
Determine expected number of orders
D = 1,000 units Q* = 200 units
S = $10 per order
H = $.50 per unit per year
Expected Demand D
number of = N = =
orders Order quantity Q*
1,000
N= = 5 orders per year
200
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An EOQ Example
Determine optimal time between orders
D = 1,000 units Q* = 200 units
S = $10 per order N = 5 orders/year
H = $.50 per unit per year
Expected Number of working days per year
time between = T =
orders Expected number of orders
250
T= = 50 days between orders
5
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An EOQ Example
Determine the total annual cost
D = 1,000 units Q* = 200 units
S = $10 per order N = 5 orders/year
H = $.50 per unit per year T = 50 days
Total annual cost = Setup cost + Holding cost
D Q
TC = S + H
Q 2
1,000 200
= ($10) + ($.50)
200 2
= (5)($10) + (100)($.50)
= $50 + $50 = $100
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The EOQ Model
When including actual cost of material P
Total annual cost = Setup cost + Holding cost + Product cost
D Q
TC = S + H + PD
Q 2
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Robust Model
▶ The EOQ model is robust
▶ It works even if all parameters and
assumptions are not met
▶ The total cost curve is relatively flat in
the area of the EOQ
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An EOQ Example
Determine optimal number of needles to order
D = 1,000 units 1,500 units Q*1,000 = 200 units
S = $10 per order T = 50 days
H = $.50 per unit per year Q*1,500 = 244.9 units
N= 5 orders/year
Ordering old Q* Ordering new Q*
D Q
TC = S+ H
Q 2 1,500 244.9
= ($10) + ($.50)
1,500 200 244.9 2
= ($10) + ($.50)
200 2 = 6.125($10) +122.45($.50)
= $75 + $50 = $125 = $61.25 + $61.22 = $122.47
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An EOQ Example
Determine optimal number of needles to order
D = 1,000 units 1,500 units Q*1,000
Only=2% 200less
units
than
S = $10 per order the
T =total cost of
50 days
H = $.50 per unit per year $125
Q*1,500 whenunits
= 244.9 the
N= 5 orders/year order quantity was
200
Ordering old Q* Ordering new Q*
D Q
TC = S+ H
Q 2 1,500 244.9
= ($10) + ($.50)
1,500 200 244.9 2
= ($10) + ($.50)
200 2 = 6.125($10) +122.45($.50)
= $75 + $50 = $125 = $61.25 + $61.22 = $122.47
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Reorder Points
▶ EOQ answers the “how much” question
▶ The reorder point (ROP) tells “when” to order
▶ Lead time (L) is the time between placing and
receiving an order
Demand Lead time for a new
ROP = per day order in days
ROP = d x L
d= D
Number of working days in a year
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Reorder Point Curve
Figure 12.5
Q*
Stock is replenished as order arrives
Inventory level (units)
Slope = units/day = d
ROP
(units)
Time (days)
Lead time = L
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Reorder Point Example
Demand = 8,000 iPhones per year
250 working day year
Lead time for orders is 3 working days, may take 4
D
d=
Number of working days in a year
= 8,000/250 = 32 units
ROP = d x L
= 32 units per day x 3 days = 96 units
= 32 units per day x 4 days = 128 units
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Production Order Quantity Model
1. Used when inventory builds up over a
period of time after an order is placed
2. Used when units are produced and
sold simultaneously Figure 12.6
Part of inventory cycle during which
Inventory level
production (and usage) is taking place
Demand part of cycle with no
production (only usage takes place)
Maximum
inventory
t Time
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Production Order Quantity Model
Q = Number of units per order p = Daily production rate
H = Holding cost per unit per year d = Daily demand (usage) rate
t = Length of the production run in days
Annual inventory = (Average inventory level) × Holding cost
holding cost per unit per year
Annual inventory = (Maximum inventory level)/2
level
Maximum = Total produced during – Total used during
inventory level the production run the production run
= pt – dt
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Production Order Quantity Model
Q = Number of units per order p = Daily production rate
H = Holding cost per unit per year d = Daily demand (usage) rate
t = Length of the production run in days
Maximum = Total produced during – Total used during
inventory level the production run the production run
= pt – dt
However, Q = total produced = pt ; thus t = Q/p
Maximum Q Q d
inventory level =p p –d p =Q 1– p
Maximum inventory level Q d
Holding cost = (H) = 1– H
2 2 p
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Production Order Quantity Model
Q = Number of units per order p = Daily production rate
H = Holding cost per unit per year d = Daily demand (usage) rate
t = Length of the production run in days
Setup cost = (D / Q)S
(
Holding cost = 21 HQ éë1- d p ùû )
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Production Order Quantity
Example
D = 1,000 units p = 8 units per day
S = $10 d = 4 units per day
H = $0.50 per unit per year
= 282.8 hubcaps, or 283 hubcaps
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Production Order Quantity Model
Note:
D 1,000
d=4= =
Number of days the plant is in operation 250
When annual data are used the equation becomes:
2DS
Q =*
p æ Annual demand rate ö
H ç1- ÷
è Annual production rate ø
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Quantity Discount Models
▶ Reduced prices are often available when larger
quantities are purchased
▶ Trade-off is between reduced product cost and
increased holding cost
TABLE 12.2 A Quantity Discount Schedule
PRICE RANGE QUANTITY ORDERED PRICE PER UNIT P
Initial price 0 to 119 $100
Discount price 1 120 to 1,499 $ 98
Discount price 2 1,500 and over $ 96
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Quantity Discount Models
Total annual cost = Setup cost + Holding cost + Product cost
D Q
TC = S + IP + PD
Q 2
where Q = Quantity ordered P = Price per unit
D = Annual demand in units I = Holding cost per unit per year
S = Ordering or setup cost per order expressed as a percent of price P
2DS
Q* =
IP
Because unit price varies, holding cost is expressed
as a percentage (I) of unit price (P)
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Quantity Discount Models
Steps in analyzing a quantity discount
1. Starting with the lowest possible purchase
price, calculate Q* until the first feasible
EOQ is found. This is a possible best order
quantity, along with all price-break
quantities for all lower prices.
2. Calculate the total annual cost for each
possible order quantity determined in Step
1. Select the quantity that gives the lowest
total cost.
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Quantity Discount Models
Figure 12.7
Initial
Price Discount Price 1 Discount Price 2
550,000 –
TC for No Discount
540,000 –
Annual Total Cost
TC for Discount 1
530,000 –
Not Feasible TC for Discount 2
520,053 –
517,155 –
Feasible
510,000 –
Not Feasible
Possible Order
500,000 – Quantities
120 1,500
Order Quantity
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Quantity Discount Example
Calculate Q* for every discount 2DS
Q =*
starting with the lowest price IP
2(5,200)($200)
Q$96* = = 278 drones/order
(.28)($96)
Infeasible – calculate Q*
for next-higher price
2(5,200)($200)
Q$98* = = 275 drones/order
(.28)($98)
Feasible
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Quantity Discount Example
TABLE 12.3 Total Cost Computations for Chris Beehner Electronics
ANNUAL ANNUAL ANNUAL
ORDER UNIT ORDERING HOLDING PRODUCT TOTAL ANNUAL
QUANTITY PRICE COST COST COST COST
275 $98 $3,782 $3,773 $509,600 $517,155
1,500 $96 $693 $20,160 $499,200 $520,053
Choose the price and quantity that gives the
lowest total cost
Buy 275 drones at $98 per unit
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Quantity Discount Variations
▶ All-units discount is the most popular form
▶ Incremental quantity discounts apply only to
those units purchased beyond the price
break quantity
▶ Fixed fees may encourage larger purchases
▶ Aggregation over items or time
▶ Truckload discounts, buy-one-get-one-free
offers, one-time-only sales
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Probabilistic Models and
Safety Stock
▶ Used when demand is not constant or certain
▶ Use safety stock to achieve a desired service
level and avoid stockouts
ROP = d × L + ss
Annual stockout costs = The sum of the units short
for each demand level × The probability of that
demand level × The stockout cost/unit
× The number of orders per year
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Safety Stock Example
ROP = 50 units Stockout cost = $40 per frame
Orders per year = 6 Carrying cost = $5 per frame per year
NUMBER OF UNITS PROBABILITY
30 .2
40 .2
ROP → 50 .3
60 .2
70 .1
1.0
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Safety Stock Example
ROP = 50 units Stockout cost = $40 per frame
Orders per year = 6 Carrying cost = $5 per frame per year
SAFETY ADDITIONAL TOTAL
STOCK HOLDING COST STOCKOUT COST COST
20 (20)($5) = $100 $0 $100
10 (10)($5) = $ 50 (10)(.1)($40)(6) = $240 $290
0 $ 0 (10)(.2)($40)(6) + (20)(.1)($40)(6) = $960 $960
A safety stock of 20 frames gives the lowest total cost
ROP = 50 + 20 = 70 frames
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Probabilistic Demand
Figure 12.8
Minimum demand during lead time
Inventory level
Maximum demand during lead time
Mean demand during lead time
ROP = 350 + safety stock of 16.5 = 366.5
ROP →
Normal distribution probability of
demand during lead time
Expected demand during lead time (350 kits)
Safety stock 16.5 units
0 Place Lead
time Receive Time
order order
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Probabilistic Demand
Use prescribed service levels to set safety
stock when the cost of stockouts cannot be
determined
ROP = demand during lead time + ZsdLT
where Z = Number of standard deviations
sdLT = Standard deviation of demand during lead
time
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Probabilistic Demand
Probability of Risk of a stockout
no stockout (5% of area of
95% of the time normal curve)
Mean ROP = ? kits Quantity
demand
350
Safety
stock
0 z
Number of
standard deviations
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Probabilistic Example
m = Average demand = 350 kits
sdLT = Standard deviation of
demand during lead time = 10 kits
Stockout policy = 5% (service level = 95%)
Using Appendix I, for an area under the curve of
95%, the Z = 1.645
Safety stock = ZsdLT = 1.645(10) = 16.5 kits
Reorder point = Expected demand during lead time +
Safety stock
= 350 kits + 16.5 kits of safety stock
= 366.5 or 367 kits
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Other Probabilistic Models
▶ When data on demand during lead time
are not available, there are other models
available
1. When demand is variable and lead time is
constant
2. When lead time is variable and demand is
constant
3. When both demand and lead time are
variable
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Other Probabilistic Models
Demand is variable and lead time is constant
ROP = (Average daily demand
× Lead time in days) + ZsdLT
where sdLT = sd Lead time
sd = Standard deviation of demand per day
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Probabilistic Example
Average daily demand (normally distributed) = 15
Lead time in days (constant) = 2
Standard deviation of daily demand = 5
Service level = 90%
Z for 90% = 1.28
From Appendix I
ROP = (15 units × 2 days) + ZsdLT
= 30 + 1.28(5)( 2)
= 30 + 9.02 = 39.02 ≈ 39
Safety stock is about 9 computers
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Other Probabilistic Models
Lead time is variable and demand is constant
ROP = (Daily demand × Average lead time
in days) + Z × (Daily demand) × sLT
where sLT = Standard deviation of lead time in days
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Probabilistic Example
Daily demand (constant) = 10
Average lead time = 6 days
Standard deviation of lead time = sLT = 1
Service level = 98%, so Z (from Appendix I) = 2.055
ROP = (10 units × 6 days) + 2.055(10 units)(1)
= 60 + 20.55 = 80.55
Reorder point is about 81 cameras
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Other Probabilistic Models
Both demand and lead time are variable
ROP = (Average daily demand
× Average lead time) + ZsdLT
where sd = Standard deviation of demand per day
sLT = Standard deviation of lead time in days
sdLT = (Average lead time × sd2)
+ (Average daily demand)2s2LT
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Probabilistic Example
Average daily demand (normally distributed) = 150
Standard deviation = sd = 16
Average lead time 5 days (normally distributed)
Standard deviation = sLT = 1 day
Service level = 95%, so Z = 1.645 (from Appendix I)
ROP = (150 packs ´5 days)+1.645s dLT
s dLT = ( ) (
5 days ´162 + 1502 ´12 = ) (5´256) + (22,500 ´1)
= (1,280) + (22,500) = 23,780 @ 154
ROP = (150 ´5)+1.645(154) @ 750 +253 = 1,003 packs
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Single-Period Model
▶ Only one order is placed for a product
▶ Units have little or no value at the end of the
sales period
Cs = Cost of shortage = Sales price/unit – Cost/unit
Co = Cost of overage = Cost/unit – Salvage value
Cs
Service level =
Cs + Co
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Single-Period Example
Average demand = m = 120 papers/day
Standard deviation = s = 15 papers
Cs = cost of shortage = $1.25 – $.70 = $.55
Co = cost of overage = $.70 – $.30 = $.40
Cs
Service level =
Cs + Co
.55 Service
= level
.55 + .40 57.9%
.55
= = .579 m = 120
.95
Optimal stocking level
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Single-Period Example
From Appendix I, for the area .579, Z .199
The optimal stocking level
= 120 copies + (.199)(s)
= 120 + (.199)(15) = 120 + 3 = 123 papers
The stockout risk = 1 – Service level
= 1 – .579 = .421 = 42.1%
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Fixed-Period (P) Systems
▶ Fixed-quantity models require
continuous monitoring using perpetual
inventory systems
▶ In fixed-period systems orders placed
at the end of a fixed period
▶ Periodic review, P system
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Fixed-Period (P) Systems
▶ Inventory counted only at end of period
▶ Order brings inventory up to target level
▶ Only relevant costs are ordering and
holding
▶ Lead times are known and constant
▶ Items are independent of one another
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Fixed-Period (P) Systems
Figure 12.9
Target quantity (T)
Q4
Q2
On-hand inventory
Q1 P
Q3
Time
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Fixed-Period Systems
▶ Inventory is only counted at each
review period
▶ May be scheduled at convenient times
▶ Appropriate in routine situations
▶ May result in stockouts between
periods
▶ May require increased safety stock
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