Term Paper On Inventory Management W.R.T. Retail Industry
Term Paper On Inventory Management W.R.T. Retail Industry
Term Paper On Inventory Management W.R.T. Retail Industry
ABSTRACT
Three Rights
The marketing success of many businesses depends upon their ability to provide the
customer with the right merchandise in the right place at the right time. The right
merchandise is the item that the customer desires; the right place is in your inventory, not
a supplier's warehouse; the right time is immediately.
Failure to have the right merchandise in the right place at the right time can often lead to
lost sales and, even worse, to lost customers. If they cannot purchase what they want
today from your business, you will lose sales and your competition will gain customers.
Capital Restriction
Many of the techniques described are general guidelines that must be adapted to the
needs of your customers, your business, and your available capital. If you apply these
techniques, liberally sprinkled with your own professional judgment, you will not only be
able to detect problems as early as possible but you will also be able to prevent many
potential problems from ever occurring.
Introduction
You are in trouble if you have to keep telling customers, "I'm sorry we're out of that size.
May we order it for you?" Even though the shirts are selling briskly, you will lose
customers if you don't have an item in stock. When the customer spends, you have got to
be ready with the goods. This is what inventory management is all about.
In many retail and wholesale operations, the single largest asset is inventory. Control of
this investment is vital. It will eliminate a number of the problems associated with capital
shortages and will also provide capital to permit expansion of operations for increased
sales and profit.
Inventory problems often require prompt corrective action. In many businesses, the
market life of inventory is short and if inventory is insufficient when market demand
peaks, sales and profits are lost. If inventory is excessive when demand declines, the
excess must be cleared, often at sharply reduced prices, again affecting profits.
These special problems are particularly acute in certain businesses. The market life for
the latest hit record may be just a few months. For seasonal greeting cards, the market
life is a few weeks, and for fresh fruit, produce and baked goods, the market life is
measured in days.
You can control the inventory levels in your business to provide a suitable assortment
and supply to meet market requirements while minimizing the risk of excessive
investments. This can be accomplished by:
1) Investing in inventory wisely so that excessive capital is not tied up, excessive space is
not required, and the investment does not force unnecessary borrowing and interest
expense.
2) Maintaining accurate, up-to-date records to help identify and prevent shortages and to
serve as a database for decisions.
3) Taking prompt action to correct inventory imbalances.
Inventory Management
1. Time - The time lags present in the supply chain, from supplier to user at
every stage, requires that you maintain certain amount of inventory to use in this
"lead time"
2. Uncertainty - Inventories are maintained as buffers to meet uncertainties
in demand, supply and movements of goods.
3. Economies of scale - Ideal condition of "one unit at a time at a place
where user needs it, when he needs it" principle tends to incur lots of costs in
terms of logistics. So bulk buying, movement and storing brings in economies of
scale, thus inventory.
Most manufacturing organizations usually divide their "goods for sale" inventory into:
Raw materials - materials and components scheduled for use in making a product.
Work in process, WIP - materials and components that have begun their
transformation to finished goods.
Finished goods - goods ready for sale to customers.
Goods for resale - returned goods that are salable.
Purpose
Integrating demand forecasting with inventory management in this way also allows for
the prediction of the "can fit" point when inventory storage is limited on a per product
basis.
DEMAND;-
Demand is the number of items required per period which is not necessarily equal
amount sold as some demand may go unfulfilled because of storage or delays.
Deterministic Demand;-
If the number of items required (i.e. demand) in a subsequent period of time is known
then such demand are called deterministic demands.
If the demand over a subsequent period of time is not known with certainty then such
demands are called non-deterministic or probabilistic demand.
Lead Time ;-
The time gap between the time of placing an order or the starting of the production and
the time of arrival or delivery of goods to the inventory is called lead time.
Amount Delivered:-
Inventory Replenishment
Sales Forecasting
The first step in estimating expected sales in coming months is to calculate, from
inventory records, actual sales during an appropriate review period. For example, if you
want to determine an appropriate inventory level for ski boots on October 1, it will be of
little value to consider sales in July, August, or September. Average monthly sales for the
entire year will tell you little or nothing either. A more suitable review period would be
the months of October, November, and December of the previous year. In addition, if
your sales showed a year-to-year growth rate, you should adjust review period sales for
the average sales growth that your business has experienced in the previous year.
Consider the following example. A sporting goods store desires to maintain a three
months' supply of ski boots in inventory. On October 1, the store is determining a
suitable inventory level so that an order can be prepared to build inventory to the three-
month level. Sales of ski boots have increased 20% from year to year. Sales in October,
November, and December of the previous year were as follows:
October 5, November 10, December 20
Adding 20% to each of these amounts to reflect sales growth, expected sales for the
present year would be as follows:
October 6, November 12, December 24
Expected sales for the three-month period would then be 42 (6 + 12 + 24). Therefore, the
store should try to have this quantity in inventory on October 1.
Another factor that should be considered in demand forecasting is whether or not stock
outs that prevented a customer request from being fulfilled affected sales during the
review period.
Forecasting requires measurement of customer demand for a particular item, the number
of pieces that customers wished to purchase, not just those orders that you were able to
sell. If information is available, such requests should be added to actual sales for the
review period in order to reach a more realistic estimate of demand for the coming
months.
In some businesses, accurate records are maintained of all unfulfilled customer requests.
This permits management to establish more accurate demand figures in determining
inventory replenishment requirements and making decisions to add new items to
inventory.
No business can be run by formulas alone. But formulas can be useful in guiding
decisions. Before straying from them, you should be sure to have good and sufficient
reason. One common reason for straying from the ordering formulas previously
described is the availability of quantity discounts and price specials. Naturally, you want
to take advantage of these potential savings whenever possible. However, if quantity
discounts force you to order far more than you need, the discount you earn may later be
lost when you are forced to close out the merchandise at distress prices.
Maintaining Control
Systematic review of inventory purchases is the most effective means of preventing
overstocks and avoiding lost sales. The availability of accurate inventory and sales
records, combined with your own judgment, can guide you to sound purchasing
decisions.
Inventory Valuation
Inventory calculations, based upon units, are useful when determining the inventory of a
particular item. More often, however, you will want to know the dollar value of
inventory, particularly your total inventory. Total inventory can be evaluated in total
dollars only since it usually includes a mix of various items such as apples and oranges,
which cannot be added together.
Recording Inventory
Purpose
To manage your inventory successfully, you should maintain accurate and up-to-date
records of sales and stock on hand for every item that you sell. Inventory records tell you
what you have. Sales records tell you what you need. Inventory records are used for
making the following decisions:
1) Purchases for inventory replenishment.
2) Scrapping or clearing of obsolete items that are no longer in demand.
3) Addition of new items to inventory.
System
The best type of system for your business depends largely upon the number of different
items you carry in inventory. A retail bicycle shop might carry 40 or 50 items in
inventory, a bookstore might have a few hundred titles, and a plumbing supply house
might carry several thousand different items in inventory.
Physical Inventory
A physical inventory should be taken periodically to be sure that the actual quantities on
hand equal those shown on the inventory records. The inventory records must then be
adjusted to reflect any difference between "physical inventory" and "book inventory," the
quantities shown on the inventory records. The actual quantity of each item on hand must
be counted and compared with that shown on the inventory record. Necessary
adjustments should be made immediately.
Differences between book and physical inventory arise for many reasons. The most
easily
understood, of course, is pilferage. Any business naturally wants to maintain an inventory
control system to detect this situation as early as possible.
Other reasons for inventory shortages are somewhat more subtle but equally damaging, if
not worse. For example, if your receiving procedures are faulty, a receiving clerk may
not be counting actual quantities received and comparing them with those on the vendor's
packing list or invoice. If the quantity actually received is less than that invoiced to you,
you are paying for the difference. Merchandise may be sold to customers without being
billed to them, through oversight or carelessness. In these cases, you will take a loss
equal to your cost of the product and also lose the profit that you should have earned on
the sale. Clerks may be accepting customer returns of merchandise that are no longer
saleable because of damage, stains, or packing defects. You may be ignoring
opportunities to return merchandise to vendors when it arrives in an unfit condition for
resale.
Any of these factors can result in inventory shortages. While most businesses take careful
steps to guard against theft, relatively few adopt serious procedures for protection from
inventory shortages caused by such factors as poor receiving procedures, poor billing
procedures, and merchandise damage.
Comparisons of Inventory Ratios
These same analysis techniques can be applied to inventories of individual items so that
prompt corrective action can be taken. One common cause of apparently excessive
inventories is that many inventory dollars are tied up in slow-moving items that may, in
fact, no longer be marketable. Although the total inventory investment appears adequate
or even excessive, sales are lost because capital is tied up in slow-moving items. This
capital could be more profitably invested in faster moving inventory that would have a
far higher sales and profit potential.
These individual problems can be detected by periodic measurement of the months'
supply of individual items so that overstocks can be detected and action taken to
eliminate the overstocks and free cash for more profitable investment elsewhere. For
example, a store might have a total inventory equal to 3 average months' sales.
Examination of individual inventory records reveals that many items have supplies
equivalent to 12 months' sales or more. Prompt action should be taken to reduce these
overstocks.
PROBLEM IDENTIFICATION
References;-
www.cfnanaimo.org/docs/industry.../InventoryMgmtWholesaleOrRetail.pd
f
www.womensenterprise.ca/resources/.../inventory-wholesale-retail.pdf
www.ifdaonline.org/CDE/.../Defining%20Costs%20-%20Template.doc
www.docstoc.com/.../BUSINESS-BASICS--INVENTORY-
MANAGEMENT--WHOLESALE-
www.fishbowlinventory.com/.../Inventory_Management_Decisions
www.wikipedia.com
www.google.com