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Managing the Warehouse Management

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Managing the Warehouse Management

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Warehouse Management
- The importance of inventory
- Components of inventory carrying cost
- Questions to ask prospective customers

Warehouse Management
- The importance of inventory
- Components of inventory carrying cost
- Questions to ask prospective customers

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Managing the Warehouse Management

  1. 1. May 22, 2014 1 Managing the WMS in RADIO BEACON time “If you always did what you always did you will always get what you always got.” - Mark Twain
  2. 2. May 22, 2014 2 Module Objectives The importance of inventory Components of inventory carrying cost Questions to ask prospective customers
  3. 3. May 22, 2014 3 Acronym Quiz ABC FIFO JIT ROI LTL SKU UPC Activity-based costing First-in, First-out inventory valuation Just-in-time Inventory Management Return on Investment Less than truckload Stock keeping unit Uniform product code
  4. 4. May 22, 2014 4 Basic Questions about Inventory Why do companies keep inventory on hand? – To provide prompt service to their customers What are the costs of inventory? – Space – $ – Obsolescence
  5. 5. May 22, 2014 5 Inventory – A Definition Inventory is money tied up in resources – Producers employ a variety of resources – capital, materials, labour, knowledge – and convert them into stock, called inventory
  6. 6. May 22, 2014 6 Objectives of Inventory Proximity Speed Cost optimization Radio Beacon® assists in mobilizing inventory. Inventory can be optimized to serve customers effectively and save money.
  7. 7. May 22, 2014 7 Inventory is Costly Costs money to carry until used or sold – Defined as carrying cost, which is the sum of all associated costs until goods are sold. A significant part of this cost is interest, the time value of money. Interest cost is based on the inventory valuation.
  8. 8. May 22, 2014 8 Inventory is Costly Other cost components – Materials and finished goods handling – Storage costs – rent, depreciation, utilities, insurance, security
  9. 9. May 22, 2014 9 Carrying Cost Calculation P = Product value (average) $100,000 W = Storage cost/month $500 T = Storage period 90 days in a 360 day year I = Simple Interest 12% per year D = Damage/obsolescence 1% per year (a) Interest = P X I X T / 360 $3,000 C (b) Carrying Cost = C + W + D $3,000 $1,500 $250 $4,750 (c) Inventory Carrying Rate = $4,750 / $100,000 4.75% (d) Inventory Value after 90 Days = P + C + W - D $100,000 $3,000 $1,500 $250 $104,250
  10. 10. May 22, 2014 10 Inventory is Costly Tip – Carefully assess the inventory costs in terms of shrinkage, loss and damage, mysterious disappearance, theft and obsolescence
  11. 11. May 22, 2014 11 Develop Qualitative information Collect reliable logistics information about your products, customers, suppliers, manufacturing process, inventory and network from your existing databases If necessary, simulate your network with the aid of modeling techniques.
  12. 12. May 22, 2014 12 Product Information $ Value? Handling, storage, transportation, shelf life, hazardous characteristics? Seasonality? Temperature protection? Loss and damage experience? Obsolescence factor? Space requirements? Warehouse services needs?
  13. 13. May 22, 2014 13 Customer Information Who are your customers? Where are they located – are they concentrated or dispersed? What are your customers’ delivery requirements? What are your channels of distribution? What are your domestic or global marketing areas and regions? Are your products readily available from the competition?
  14. 14. May 22, 2014 14 Supplier Information What determines your need for raw materials or supplies inventory? Are raw materials and supplies readily available or do they have to be made to order? What are your ordering patterns? Are suppliers reliable and timely?
  15. 15. May 22, 2014 15 Inbound/Outbound Shipping What are your freight terms? What are the modes of transportation? Are they effective and cost-efficient? How many customers have you lost as a result of shipping errors?
  16. 16. May 22, 2014 16 Raw Materials Inventory Information What determines your need for raw materials inventory? How have or can you develop alternative sources of raw materials? Could you reduce raw materials and supplies inventories and related warehousing cost by changing your purchasing practices and method of production and scheduling?
  17. 17. May 22, 2014 17 Finished Goods Inventory Information What determines your need for finished goods inventory – customers ordering patterns and practices, market presence and share, or competition? Have quality demands (JIT, ECR, QR, ISO 9000) increased or decreased inventory locations and volumes? Have you calculated your response time? What have you done to shorten your response time?
  18. 18. May 22, 2014 18 Distribution Network Why and how were inventory locations selected? Are transportation transit times realistic? How are inventory availability and required levels determined? Does each location provide enough or too much space? What is the performance of each? Could you reduce the number of warehouse locations and still maintain acceptable service levels?
  19. 19. May 22, 2014 19 Develop Quantitative Information Shipments – Inbound (I/B) • Domestic • Import – Outbound (O/B) • Domestic • Export – In Transit • From plant to warehouse • Between warehouses Transportation Modes – Truckload (TL) – Less-than-truckload (LTL) – Container – Parcel – express shipping – Customer pickup
  20. 20. May 22, 2014 20 Develop Quantitative Information Average inventory volume Sq/Cu feet used Throughput activity – # receipts – # orders – # shipments – Special services Cost – Fixed and variable – Storage (time-based) – Handling (transaction- based) – Allocations – Administration overhead Warehouse/Distribution Centres
  21. 21. May 22, 2014 21 Conclusion Know which questions are applicable to your customers Understand the basic concepts of inventory and warehousing Understand the cost components of carrying inventory

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