A blog post by Preeti Havaldar
The Pareto
principle (also known as the 80-20 rule) states that – 80% of the effects come
from 20% of the causes. This rule
can be applied for product sales as well. As per studies, 80% of a company’s
sales come from 20% of its products. From an inventory management standpoint,
it is important for a company to maintain inventory for these popular 20%
of the products that account for the most sales.
ABC Analysis
ABC analysis
is the inventory control technique that builds up on the Pareto’s principle. It
involves dividing the products in 3 categories – “A”, “B” and “C”, where
category A contains most popular or profitable 20% of the products and category
B and C contain the rest (can be divided as per the company’s preferences). While
using ABC analysis, the company should focus more on managing inventory for category-A
products to ensure they fulfill the demand.
The A-B-C
classification
Many
successful businesses use the ABC inventory management principle to classify
products in order to stock them up for prompt sales. Let us look at how General
Electric classifies its products into categories. The first attempt at classification
was made by H. Ford Dickey in 1951, when Ford suggested that category of a
product should be based on sales volume, lead-time and cash flow. Category A
would include items with largest sales and longest lead time and category C
would include items with low sales.
Suggested policy guidelines
for A , B & C classes of items
|
||
Category A
|
Category B
|
Category C
|
Very strict cons. control
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Moderate control
|
Loose control
|
No or very low safety stock
|
Low safety stock
|
High safety stock
|
Phased delivery (Weekly)
|
Once in three months
|
Once in 6 months
|
Weekly control report
|
Monthly control report
|
Quarterly report
|
Maximum follow up
|
Periodic follow up
|
Exceptional
|
As many sources as possible
|
Two or more reliable
|
Two reliable
|
Accurate forecasts
|
Estimates on past data
|
Rough estimate
|
Central purchasing /storage
|
Combination purchasing
|
Decentralised
|
Max.efforts to control LT
|
Moderate
|
Min.clerical efforts
|
To be handled by Sr.officers
|
Middle level
|
Can be delegated
|
ABC
inventory management
The ABC
classification also allows the company to apply different management techniques
depending on the categories. For instance,
the A-inventory should be counted regularly counted to ensure availability
whereas C-inventory can be counted less often as it has items of lower importance.
Also most of the storage costs should be used for A-inventory, whereas the
least selling items from C-inventory can be removed to reduce storage overhead.
Role of demand
forecasting in inventory management
Demand
forecasting techniques can provide powerful insights to predict the demand for products
and the products can be reclassified based on the forecast. For instance, if in
a retail store, a torch is classified as category C today, in case of
emergency, the torch can be reclassified as category A as the sales would spike
up suddenly.
Inventory
management is a crucial part of any supply chain as it accounts for internal
costs to the company. Hence planning inventory is the most important phase of
supply chain. Information systems and software can be leveraged to achieve inventory
management efficiency.
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