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Casual Articles - Inventory Reduction - A How To Guide
Small Business Development: A Must For IT Consultants t sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories.Small business development is a make or break activity when starting out as an IT consultant. You need to get your name out there as much as you can. Business won't drop into your lap - you need to use proactive small business development techniques to get things moving.The foremost method for small business development is reaching out to business organizations. You should try to blanket your entire region. To get this kind of coverage, your small business development takes time.Plan to get out to 8 to 12 events of all sorts in any given month. To be effective, in your first year of business you should be spending a minimum of 15 to 25% of your time on small business development. If you work a 40 hour week (which is more like a 55 hour week) you should be spending one to two days a week on small business development activities.Other small business development activities include:Follow upsHighly targeted direct mail campaignsSeminarsNetworkingIn the first few months, before you have regular clients, you will likely spend 50 - 80% of your time in small business development. You can cut this down once you are on your feet. As your client base improves you can pare your small business develop down to four to six events a month and eventually get down to two to three.Small business development is more important than your administrative duties and your IT training. You will have plenty of time to take care of those things after you have built up a pool of regular, long-term clients.The Bottom Line on Small Business DevelopmentSmall business development is your job. If it is not most of your job when you first start out then something is wrong. As you get more and more clients your small business development will get progressively less but it should never get to zero. This is the life-blood of your IT consulting business so give it the attention it deserves.Copyright MMI-MMVI, Computer Consulting 101. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. {Attention Publishers: Live hyperlink in author resource box required for copyright compliance} • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
6 Things I Know About Postcards That You Don't INTRODUCTION
In my plethora of experience tucked away between these ears, I have managed to cull out for you what I consider the “best of the best” – in other words, I took the most proven details about postcards that were significant to you starting a postcard campaign and really winning at it. So here goes the most incisive higlights about postcards.1) I know that a postcard is better than something in an envelope.For many reasons, the main one being, in an envelope you can’t make your potential customer see your message.People are fast. We see and read very quickly – actually much more quickly than we even realize.. Think about yourself – how fast do you go through your mail and process out what you want to keep and what you don’t want to keep? Pretty darn fast. It takes fractions of seconds to go through and process in your mind “bill, bill, advertisement, bill, advertisement, letter…” And it also takes fractions of seconds to decide whether you are even going to bother giving more attention to the pieces that you designated as advertisements.With a postcard, even if they throw it away, they already saw your message regardless of whether they think they did or not. They saw it enough to throw it away, didn’t they?And the next time they get that same postcard in the mail, they see it again as they throw it in the trash.Let’s face it - junk mail gets thrown away. And postcards are junk mail to a lot of people.Although they may be junk mail, postcards get read no matter what – even if thrown away without reading them, they get seen. It’s like the phoenix rising up from the ashes.2) I know that if you are not doing repeat mail with your postcards you are flushing your money down the toilet.Repeat mailings cannot be repeated enough. DO REPEAT MAILINGS! DO REPEAT MAILINGS! DO REPEAT MAILINGS! A one shot in the dark postcard mailing is not going to change your business, your bottom line, your life or your anything.The long and the short of it is, if you are not up to confronting that you need to do a campaign then don’t bother being in business. Sorry if I sound a bit harsh!3) I know that the best price is not best necessarily the best postcard.The cheapest is not necessarily the best. The old adage “you get what you pay for” applies here. Get whatever potential postcard company you interview to send you samples. Make sure the postcard is a very good, quality, stiff card that catches your attention. Get them to give you customer references. Call those references and find out what they think of that company’s service, product, etc.There is a lot of behind-the-scenes work that goes into getting your postcard done right. If they screw up printing, if they don’t get your mailing out on deadline, etc. – doing it dirt cheap might not mean getting the quality service you need or want.4) I k INVENTORY is the largest single asset on the balance sheet of many manufacturers and distributors. It is usually the most expensive asset to own and maintain as well, with estimates of carrying costs typically running 25-30 cents or more on the dollar annually. Therefore, any useful suggestions to optimize INVENTORY investment and associated expenses would be most valuable. The paper addresses how to manage INVENTORY investment to optimum levels, which means a reduction or major redistribution of it in most companies. Optimal INVENTORY levels come down as management makes the operation more efficient by improving processes, reducing lead-time, managing supply and demand better. One can’t “attack” INVENTORY effectively, but only its underlying causes, which will be discussed. Most INVENTORY “problems” are merely a reflection of management, design, process or operational problems. Current literature on Just-in-Time and World-Class Manufacturing addresses how inventory reduction is a by-product of doing things right the first time.
INVENTORY will typically account for a 10-25% improvement in ROA! Certain industries, such as aerospace and defense, widely believe that INVENTORY is a non-issue, because they receive “progress payments” from customers or because they “write-off” job-end variances and leftover “residual” inventories. The facts are that these companies need to watch inventories even more closely but first they need to be made aware that there are INVENTORIES to watch. Excess inventories subject the manufacturer to additional liabilities for things such as obsolescence, rework, storage charges, etc. Most of these ultimately end up “written off” and are applied to “overhead”, but this eventually raises the overhead rate, which increases costs of doing business, which raises prices, which makes companies less competitive. Carrying Costs
• Cost of money – The cost of capital to the company or, in some cases the “opportunity cost” or return that could be earned on the money by applying it productively elsewhere. The cost of money has ranged anywhere from 6% to 18% in the last 25 years. Obviously, cost of money has a very significant impact on investment strategy. • Obsolescence – The risk of INVENTORY never being used, or needing rework to make it usable, needs to be factored into the cost of owning INVENTORY. In theory (and practice), the larger the INVENTORY is, and the longer it is held, the more likely engineering changes, customer preferences and technological changes will render that INVENTORY unusable. • Shrinkage – A portion of INVENTORY becomes unavailable to the owner due to loss, damage, theft or spoilage. The longer INVENTORY is there and the more there is, the more likely this is to happen. Steps to prevent it only raise carrying costs in other areas, such as security, air conditioning, better control systems, recruiting policies, etc. • Quality Factors – Allowances for yield, attrition, scrap and rework. This is really more of a function of the process than the amount of INVENTORY invested and is more related to throughput, but is usually expressed as part of the aggregate INVENTORY carrying cost. • Technological or Price Obsolescence – Prices don’t always go up. In fact, in industries such as electronics, prices often plummet due to constantly improving designs, product and process technology improvements. Therefore, it is desirable to minimize inventories in high-risk areas. • Taxes – There are two dimensions to this: 1) In some areas, a tax is levied on inventories, so the more INVENTORY, the more tax is paid. 2) INVENTORY is regarded as an asset by most accounting and tax rules. Therefore, building large inventories shows “profits” and profits are usually taxed, usually by multiple government entities. • Insurance – The cost of carrying insurance on INVENTORY needs to be considered, as well as insuring the space, equipment, people and other resources needed to control it. • Space – Costly storage space sometimes occupies 25-30% of the total facility, when one considers raw material warehouses, stockrooms, work-in-process storage, receiving, shipping, outside warehouses, MRB and residual storage areas. INVENTORY reduction campaigns frequently help companies avoid the need to move to large facilities, or permit them to shut down or cut back existing facilities. • Manpower – All of this INVENTORY needs people to order, receive inspect, record, move, count, store, retrieve, post it to the ledger, etc. People are the largest or second largest expense (behind material) for most manufacturers. • Record Keeping Systems – Software, procedures, equipment and paper must be used to stay on top of INVENTORY. • Material Handling/Storage Equipment – Conveyors, fork lifts, bar code readers, scales, AS/RS, trucks, carts, bins, racks, shelves must all be purchased, leased, maintained and cared for. • Physical Inventories, Reconciliations – Must be conducted to ensure that inventories are properly accounted for and maintained. • Transportation – Must be provided to move INVENTORY in and out of the facility, to vendors, within the facility to different workstations and storage areas. • Energy – Heat, light, humidity control, air conditioning, refrigeration and fuel must be consumed to make all this happen.
INVENTORY is not always evil. It usually exists for a reason, however a reason is not always true justification. INVENTORY is frequently kept as a buffer and masks other problems. Major Reasons for Inventory
• Pipeline – INVENTORY needed to sustain the process over its cumulative lead-time through all operations and holding points. Also included in the pipeline are paperwork operations, such as billing, which could increase inventory if not done timely enough. • Quality – Yield, attrition, scrap, rework allowances impacting amount of inventory and time inventory is in process. • Lot Size – Lot size considerations include vendor minimum order quantities, raw material and manufacturing lot sizes due to setup and other nonrecurring, lot-related cost considerations and run time impact considerations. • Supply Buffer – Extra INVENTORY carried as a hedge against unreliability of vendor or factory schedules, inaccurate records, unpredictable quality or other fluctuations tending to reduce reliability of providing materials on demand. • Demand Buffer – Extra INVENTORY planned due to uncertainty of the true requirement need date or quantity, which may vary due to poor forecasts, transportation problems, or various contingencies. • Hedge – Inventory acquired for speculative purposes with the exception that prices will rise later, justifying the earlier investment risk. Other Factors Affecting INVENTORY
• Product Design – A product design that minimizes the number of parts, picks easily obtainable materials and components, lends itself to manufacturing with the simplest possible facilities and equipment will minimize INVENTORY costs over the long pull. • Materials Supply – Specifying quality materials, well suited to the process and application, with easy availability, low prices, reliability of supply and short response time are all big advantages that can facilitate INVENTORY reduction. Having the best sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories. • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
Are You Leaving Your Yellow Pages Advertising Results To Chance? applied to “overhead”, but this eventually raises the overhead rate, which increases costs of doing business, which raises prices, which makes companies less competitive.So do me a favor right now...Pull out your copy of the Yellow Pages and look up Auto Repair. What do you see? That is right, almost all of the ads are the same! Why is this I wonder? What would differentiate your business from the other businesses in your particular section of the Yellow Pages?The reason that almost all ads are the same within a particular section of the Yellow Pages is that they are designed by the Yellow Pages company that produces the book or sells the advertising! There is no opportunity for market differentiation with the "cookie cutter" approach that most Yellow Pages advertising companies (the ones that sell the space) use in their approach when they position and place the ad...and speaking of positioning...could you be in a better spot so your ad stands out?What about trust and credibility? Does your Yellow Pages advertising separate itself from the competition in these KEY areas?And...editorial style ads win everytime over the flashy, phone number at the top ad.Can you really say that your ad "separates" itself from the crowd? Is the ad written in more of an editorial style rather than as an ad? If the answer is no...then you need to rethink your marketing through the Yellow Pages, and quit wondering why you fork out $300 or more a month and get no results!That is all from this month's tip...keep tuning in...because we are just getting warmed up here! Carrying Costs
• Cost of money – The cost of capital to the company or, in some cases the “opportunity cost” or return that could be earned on the money by applying it productively elsewhere. The cost of money has ranged anywhere from 6% to 18% in the last 25 years. Obviously, cost of money has a very significant impact on investment strategy. • Obsolescence – The risk of INVENTORY never being used, or needing rework to make it usable, needs to be factored into the cost of owning INVENTORY. In theory (and practice), the larger the INVENTORY is, and the longer it is held, the more likely engineering changes, customer preferences and technological changes will render that INVENTORY unusable. • Shrinkage – A portion of INVENTORY becomes unavailable to the owner due to loss, damage, theft or spoilage. The longer INVENTORY is there and the more there is, the more likely this is to happen. Steps to prevent it only raise carrying costs in other areas, such as security, air conditioning, better control systems, recruiting policies, etc. • Quality Factors – Allowances for yield, attrition, scrap and rework. This is really more of a function of the process than the amount of INVENTORY invested and is more related to throughput, but is usually expressed as part of the aggregate INVENTORY carrying cost. • Technological or Price Obsolescence – Prices don’t always go up. In fact, in industries such as electronics, prices often plummet due to constantly improving designs, product and process technology improvements. Therefore, it is desirable to minimize inventories in high-risk areas. • Taxes – There are two dimensions to this: 1) In some areas, a tax is levied on inventories, so the more INVENTORY, the more tax is paid. 2) INVENTORY is regarded as an asset by most accounting and tax rules. Therefore, building large inventories shows “profits” and profits are usually taxed, usually by multiple government entities. • Insurance – The cost of carrying insurance on INVENTORY needs to be considered, as well as insuring the space, equipment, people and other resources needed to control it. • Space – Costly storage space sometimes occupies 25-30% of the total facility, when one considers raw material warehouses, stockrooms, work-in-process storage, receiving, shipping, outside warehouses, MRB and residual storage areas. INVENTORY reduction campaigns frequently help companies avoid the need to move to large facilities, or permit them to shut down or cut back existing facilities. • Manpower – All of this INVENTORY needs people to order, receive inspect, record, move, count, store, retrieve, post it to the ledger, etc. People are the largest or second largest expense (behind material) for most manufacturers. • Record Keeping Systems – Software, procedures, equipment and paper must be used to stay on top of INVENTORY. • Material Handling/Storage Equipment – Conveyors, fork lifts, bar code readers, scales, AS/RS, trucks, carts, bins, racks, shelves must all be purchased, leased, maintained and cared for. • Physical Inventories, Reconciliations – Must be conducted to ensure that inventories are properly accounted for and maintained. • Transportation – Must be provided to move INVENTORY in and out of the facility, to vendors, within the facility to different workstations and storage areas. • Energy – Heat, light, humidity control, air conditioning, refrigeration and fuel must be consumed to make all this happen.
INVENTORY is not always evil. It usually exists for a reason, however a reason is not always true justification. INVENTORY is frequently kept as a buffer and masks other problems. Major Reasons for Inventory
• Pipeline – INVENTORY needed to sustain the process over its cumulative lead-time through all operations and holding points. Also included in the pipeline are paperwork operations, such as billing, which could increase inventory if not done timely enough. • Quality – Yield, attrition, scrap, rework allowances impacting amount of inventory and time inventory is in process. • Lot Size – Lot size considerations include vendor minimum order quantities, raw material and manufacturing lot sizes due to setup and other nonrecurring, lot-related cost considerations and run time impact considerations. • Supply Buffer – Extra INVENTORY carried as a hedge against unreliability of vendor or factory schedules, inaccurate records, unpredictable quality or other fluctuations tending to reduce reliability of providing materials on demand. • Demand Buffer – Extra INVENTORY planned due to uncertainty of the true requirement need date or quantity, which may vary due to poor forecasts, transportation problems, or various contingencies. • Hedge – Inventory acquired for speculative purposes with the exception that prices will rise later, justifying the earlier investment risk. Other Factors Affecting INVENTORY
• Product Design – A product design that minimizes the number of parts, picks easily obtainable materials and components, lends itself to manufacturing with the simplest possible facilities and equipment will minimize INVENTORY costs over the long pull. • Materials Supply – Specifying quality materials, well suited to the process and application, with easy availability, low prices, reliability of supply and short response time are all big advantages that can facilitate INVENTORY reduction. Having the best sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories. • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
For Just A Little More You Can Live In Beverly Hills! levied on inventories, so the more INVENTORY, the more tax is paid. 2) INVENTORY is regarded as an asset by most accounting and tax rules. Therefore, building large inventories shows “profits” and profits are usually taxed, usually by multiple government entities.A few years ago, David McClelland of Harvard did some interesting research about getting ahead in life.He found that people who rise to the top have higher aspirations than those who are sitting next to them in classes, working in the next cubicle, or living next door.This “need to achieve,” more than talent, money, and other advantages is the key determinant of success.There are other terms for it, such as “fire in the belly,” “durable ambition,” and the like.But fundamentally, when you aspire, you go higher!™What’s extraordinary to me, and I’ve seen this first hand time and again, is the extent to which we limit ourselves and restrict our lifestyles based more on attitudes than on earnings.For example, today, you can rent an apartment in Beverly Hills, California, for only 10-20% more than a comparable unit will cost you in Los Angeles’ neighboring communities. You’ll have access to better public schools, smoother roads, world- renowned police protection, and of course, all the status you could want.And you can lunch with movie and TV stars, and luminaries from all walks of life, for the price of a corned beef sandwich at the neighborhood delicatessen.Check it out for yourself!Ok, this may not be your dream, but it would suit a lot of people if they could only get over their own self-imposed limitations. Most folks aren’t knocking down the doors to get in to better places because they believe they don’t, and can’t “belong.” They have the money, and as you can see, that’s not the challenge.It’s the aspiration. They’re just not aiming high enough.The same logic applies to the clothes we wear and nearly every goodie.By the way, did I mention you could drive a Porsche for just a little more than you’d pay for a lesser car? • Insurance – The cost of carrying insurance on INVENTORY needs to be considered, as well as insuring the space, equipment, people and other resources needed to control it. • Space – Costly storage space sometimes occupies 25-30% of the total facility, when one considers raw material warehouses, stockrooms, work-in-process storage, receiving, shipping, outside warehouses, MRB and residual storage areas. INVENTORY reduction campaigns frequently help companies avoid the need to move to large facilities, or permit them to shut down or cut back existing facilities. • Manpower – All of this INVENTORY needs people to order, receive inspect, record, move, count, store, retrieve, post it to the ledger, etc. People are the largest or second largest expense (behind material) for most manufacturers. • Record Keeping Systems – Software, procedures, equipment and paper must be used to stay on top of INVENTORY. • Material Handling/Storage Equipment – Conveyors, fork lifts, bar code readers, scales, AS/RS, trucks, carts, bins, racks, shelves must all be purchased, leased, maintained and cared for. • Physical Inventories, Reconciliations – Must be conducted to ensure that inventories are properly accounted for and maintained. • Transportation – Must be provided to move INVENTORY in and out of the facility, to vendors, within the facility to different workstations and storage areas. • Energy – Heat, light, humidity control, air conditioning, refrigeration and fuel must be consumed to make all this happen.
INVENTORY is not always evil. It usually exists for a reason, however a reason is not always true justification. INVENTORY is frequently kept as a buffer and masks other problems. Major Reasons for Inventory
• Pipeline – INVENTORY needed to sustain the process over its cumulative lead-time through all operations and holding points. Also included in the pipeline are paperwork operations, such as billing, which could increase inventory if not done timely enough. • Quality – Yield, attrition, scrap, rework allowances impacting amount of inventory and time inventory is in process. • Lot Size – Lot size considerations include vendor minimum order quantities, raw material and manufacturing lot sizes due to setup and other nonrecurring, lot-related cost considerations and run time impact considerations. • Supply Buffer – Extra INVENTORY carried as a hedge against unreliability of vendor or factory schedules, inaccurate records, unpredictable quality or other fluctuations tending to reduce reliability of providing materials on demand. • Demand Buffer – Extra INVENTORY planned due to uncertainty of the true requirement need date or quantity, which may vary due to poor forecasts, transportation problems, or various contingencies. • Hedge – Inventory acquired for speculative purposes with the exception that prices will rise later, justifying the earlier investment risk. Other Factors Affecting INVENTORY
• Product Design – A product design that minimizes the number of parts, picks easily obtainable materials and components, lends itself to manufacturing with the simplest possible facilities and equipment will minimize INVENTORY costs over the long pull. • Materials Supply – Specifying quality materials, well suited to the process and application, with easy availability, low prices, reliability of supply and short response time are all big advantages that can facilitate INVENTORY reduction. Having the best sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories. • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
What Does the Consumer Want? and masks other problems.No matter who is your consumer? Anyway he is the highest authority for you, whose opinion is a law for you. One of the best definitions of “a consumer” belongs to Mahatma Gandi, many leading companies owe their primacy to these simple postulates: Consumer is the main person in your office. He does not depend on you. All of us depend on him. He is no hindrance for our work. He is the target of our work. He is a part of our work. We don’t do him a favor serving him. He does us a favor giving us such an opportunity. The trite phrase “Client is always right” – this is the credo of any marketing – oriented company aimed at success. It can’t be otherwise. As a company with long –term goals of development you should know what your customer wants. Without it you will hardly manage to build a good service for your clients. So, what are the clients’ present expectations?They want to feel secure and relaxed. In everything. A student purchasing a custom law essay from online writing service, wants to be sure that he will get a good mark, the housewife expects the house appliances serve even to her grandchildren. And if something goes wrong your company should have a fast way of eliminating this problem. Customers are very grateful to those who help them in their routine problems (both new and old) they can’t cope with on their own. A customer often has no desire to go deep into the details of some device. He needs someone competent to explain him how it works and what it is for. Many companies are expanding and flourishing because they appear to be convenient for their clients. For example on- line custom term paper writing services assist students in their busy academic career by building an efficient customer support service and providing them with quality writing. They make the students’ life easier. Customers want personal attention and contact with the company representatives.They want quality. It is natural. Besides, they wish to have an opportunity to have a personal control and estimate the level of this quality. Customers wish to have a chance of returning items they are not satisfied with. It means that if a person finds some fault with the product he has a right to demand a refund and you are to give him money back. Clients expect to have a direct access to the company with no intermediaries involved. Consumer wants you to bring them joy and pleasure. They expect to meet easy – going people in your company.That is why they can’t stand long and complicated instructions what they have to do when something goes wrong. They anticipate your customer support service is ready to come and fix everything all right. Customer wants to live in the atmosphere of predictability regarding your company. That is why McDonalds is so popular: you just know what you will be offered when you come here. The following are the steps of your company image formation and retaining of the custome Major Reasons for Inventory
• Pipeline – INVENTORY needed to sustain the process over its cumulative lead-time through all operations and holding points. Also included in the pipeline are paperwork operations, such as billing, which could increase inventory if not done timely enough. • Quality – Yield, attrition, scrap, rework allowances impacting amount of inventory and time inventory is in process. • Lot Size – Lot size considerations include vendor minimum order quantities, raw material and manufacturing lot sizes due to setup and other nonrecurring, lot-related cost considerations and run time impact considerations. • Supply Buffer – Extra INVENTORY carried as a hedge against unreliability of vendor or factory schedules, inaccurate records, unpredictable quality or other fluctuations tending to reduce reliability of providing materials on demand. • Demand Buffer – Extra INVENTORY planned due to uncertainty of the true requirement need date or quantity, which may vary due to poor forecasts, transportation problems, or various contingencies. • Hedge – Inventory acquired for speculative purposes with the exception that prices will rise later, justifying the earlier investment risk. Other Factors Affecting INVENTORY
• Product Design – A product design that minimizes the number of parts, picks easily obtainable materials and components, lends itself to manufacturing with the simplest possible facilities and equipment will minimize INVENTORY costs over the long pull. • Materials Supply – Specifying quality materials, well suited to the process and application, with easy availability, low prices, reliability of supply and short response time are all big advantages that can facilitate INVENTORY reduction. Having the best sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories. • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
Lead Generation: The Marketing Rule Of 10 x 10 t sources for key materials or changing existing arrangements can do a lot to help minimize inventories.Have you ever wondered why some businesses thrive and other business owners struggle to survive day after day just managing to pay their bills.Now if the statistics are correct 80% of businesses fail in the first 5 years, then this could quite possibly be you.Let’s face it, when someone first goes into business it’s usually for one of three reasons:1. They just received a huge pay out from somewhere, maybe an inheritance, redundancy package etc.2. You’ve lost your job and can’t find another one or you don’t want to find something else so you figure it’s a bout time you work for yourself instead of making someone else rich.3. You think your boss is an idiot and figure, guess what… I can do a better job than this guy. FYI. If you already employ people then guess what they are thinking JAnyway, so you decide to go out beg, borrow and steal as much money as you can and instead of working for an idiot, you know work for a lunatic: yourself!I have seen it time and time again working with business owners; the problem is they don’t plan enough to really make a success of their chosen business.In fact they kind of just fly by the seat of their pants, putting out fires as they go.I’m getting a little off track at the moment so I’ll get to the point.We’ve all heard the wealth guru’s talk about creating multiple streams of income in your life. The problem is most people only have one: their job.And remember what that stands for…Just Over Broke.But the same thing applies for your business, most people have only one way of generating new customers and it’s usually the yellow pages.But guess what happens if that strategy fails to pull enough new clients to sustain your overheads?That’s right, you go out of business.But it’s really quite simple to correct, it’s a brilliant idea that I learnt from one of my mentors, it’s called the rule of 10 X10.What this means is that instead of having only one way to generate 100% of your clients, you find ten ways to generate 10% of your clients. So if one particular way fails, then you don’t care!This is the easiest way I know of to make life far less stressful when it comes to attracting new clients to your business. • Processes – Good, reliable processes will help reduce INVENTORY, because they will help reduce scrap, rework and attrition, and also provide a more reliable flow of supply, which will help reduce buffer stocks, safety stocks, safety lead time INVENTORY and eliminate much accumulation of INVENTORY on the production floor. • Facilities Layout/Design – INVENTORY may be increased significantly if this is not done properly. Widely scattered plants, multi-story buildings with inadequate material flow capabilities and processes distributed over many different departments, all increase the amount of part travel, possibility of loss, delays and need for manpower and extra equipment to support the process. • Service Objectives – The required response time and reliability of service to customers has a big impact on INVENTORY costs. For instance, if industry standards allow making to customer specifications from scratch, there may be less need to maintain finished goods inventories. If customers or distributors carry stock, that reduces pressure upon the supplier to maintain inventories and reduce them quickly. • Planning/Control Systems – Systems employed to manage supply and demand and control the production process have a large effect on INVENTORY. The systems we refer to are:
Cost
• Overhead – Burden rates of 300%, 500% or more are not uncommon. Having a high overhead rate is not ”bad”, only total costs that are too high are “bad”. Your overhead rate is a reflection of cost distribution and accounting techniques as well. However, if overhead is going up without attendant drops in other areas and if other industry competitors are doing better, then it’s “bad.” • Setup and Other Nonrecurring Costs – In most companies, these are either part of direct labor or buried in overhead. I broke them out separately here because of their differing characteristics. Many manufacturing people feel that the way to reduce the set-up portion of overall run time is to increase lot sizes. • Labor Content – Reduction of direct labor has been one of the few bright spots in American productivity improvements over the years. The area to look at is labor variances, due to down time, quality problems, material shortages, etc., and in indirect labor. In short, reduce the overhead due to other factors increasing labor. The preceding sections should give you a better idea of the significance of INVENTORY, and what affects it. If you have been reading carefully, you have already seen opportunities for reduction, since knowing the question is frequently half of the answer. The next section will amplify and clarify some of these…
Your controller will love this. It sounds almost ridiculously simple, but there is a sequence that one ought to address inventory reduction activities in: • Don’t bring it in. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Don’t order what you don’t need. For existing commitments, cancel or reschedule where practical. Try the specific recommendations contained in the sections following…
Assign responsibility/accountability for inventory reduction
Get Control of The Checkbook
Use this process to force those responsible to justify what they are doing and why and to think through these policies and their enforcement in a new light – that of investment management. While you are doing this, use it to study the dynamics of INVENTORY planning systems and to decide what INVENTORY investments should be and what problems really are. You should develop a matrix of inventory days coverage targets by commodity by product line by planner. Then cost it out and track actual performance. Be sure to track commitments and planned amounts. Conduct basic indoctrination of people affecting INVENTORY most dramatically--planners, buyers, production management, sales, customer service– establish some temporary “edicts” and enforce them until more formal policies/procedures can be established/changed later on. Make sure you know what you are doing before you establish these. Beware of mindless “across the board reduction” edicts that could result in hurting service and profits. Have your people perform a quick “thumbnail” INVENTORY analysis
Start with a calculation of what is actually needed:
• Go through all the arguments of why people need more, sooner and then get people to agree on how they can avoid doing that. Set goals for inventory down to the level of managers and planners
Go for the “easy wins” with the best payback first. Don’t fall into “paralysis by analysis.” You can do more in the first few months than you think. Establish formal problem solving methodology
Perform “stock location audit”
Take your “hits” for inventory early
That depletes my INVENTORY of quick fixes. Now it gets a little harder… Inventory Analysis/Target Setting
First, group INVENTORY items at the part number level into categories by responsible planner and/or buyer and commodity. Do this in descending dollar sequence, prefer
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