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Businesses around the world spend millions of
dollars on software and inventory management systems in an effort to
maximise their return on investment (ROI) from inventory. Until now even the
most sophisticated of these systems left businesses way short of best
practice. In fact most of these systems institutionalise excess inventory.
The problem is that most software relies on
optimisation and this limits the opportunity to reduce inventory because it
ignores external influences. Software can only optimise the values it has,
not what could be.
World’s best practice inventory management demands that the ‘management
system’ is optimised not just the inventory. Most inventory software takes
today’s data and runs an algorithm to optimise holdings. What they miss are
the changes in the management system that could further reduce the total
level of investment. This flaw makes software systems self-limiting in their
results.
Inventory management
is much more than just the software system. Inventory management is the
combination of know-how, process, measures and reporting that together
provide the opportunity for maximizing availability while minimizing cash
investment.
The five reasons why
your inventory management is not best practice and is costing you money are:
1.
The Responsibilities Are Misaligned
The people that make
the day-to-day decisions will typically not be responsible for the working
capital outcomes; they will be responsible for availability. The problem is
that if you run out of stock all hell breaks loose but if you overstock
there is no repercussion. This is especially the case with indirect
inventory that is not subject to the usual planning scrutiny. Given this,
what do you think most people do? That’s right, they over stock!
2.
The Optimization Is Incomplete
Sophisticated software
can track all sorts of data and in many cases the software can make
optimization decisions based on that data. This can reduce your inventory
but it is self-limiting. The problem is that software optimizes only on
known data and ignores process and behavioural changes that can impact that
data. This is software optimization not system optimization. The software
should only be a tool within a bigger process of optimization.
3.
It Is Managed Reactively
Inventory is often
seen as ‘set and forget’, that is, once the item is optimized for the
current situation the requirements are not systematically revisited. It is
often only when there is a ‘cash crunch’ or some other emergency that action
is taken. Yet, even indirect inventory can represent millions of dollars of
investment and deserves frequent attention. When action is taken it usually
addresses the highly visible items rather than the real ‘cash burners’.
4.
There Is A Significant Time Lapse Before Problems Emerge
The number one
question asked about inventory is ‘what do I do with slow moving or obsolete
stock?’ Depending upon the accounting policies in your company this stock
has taken 3–5 years to reach the point where that question is asked. By this
time it often seems irrelevant to revisit the original decision or processes
that produced this result. No one would accept this approach to quality
management! No one ever asks ‘how do I prevent the accumulation of slow
moving or obsolete stock?’
5.
It Is Painful To Fix And Easy To Ignore
In most cases the
removal of obsolete inventory will result in a ‘hit’ to the profit and loss
account. However, if a reason can be found to justify it for another year
then few will argue. Eventually someone is going to have to make a decision
and it will be painful. For this reason, obsolete inventory decisions are
often driven by the opportunism of results reporting rather than good
management principles.
To truly achieve best
practice your organisation must review these issues and develop systems that
will minimize their impact or eliminate them altogether.
About The
Author
Phillip Slater is the
author of the book
Smart
Inventory Solutions and the developer of the
Inventory
Cash ReleaseTM System - ICRTM06, a world’s best practice
approach to inventory management and reduction.
For more information visit
his website at
http://www.InitiateAction.com.
Note: You are welcome
to reprint this article online on the condition that it remains complete and
unaltered (including the ‘About the author’ info at the end) and you send a
reprint to
enquiries@InitiateAction.com
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