Safety stock includes several aspects: purchased raw materials, parts to be produced, and finished product inventory. This article takes PlanMateAPS as an example to introduce the application of the APS system in parts and finished product inventory management.
Some OEM companies produce completely according to orders and do not produce safety stocks. They only need to consider the inventory level of raw materials. There are also many companies that adopt a mixed production method, where production to order and production inventory coexist. To produce safety stock, the following aspects need to be considered:
Finished products: Products with large sales volume and sustainability that require production inventory. When shipping, the products are shipped directly from the warehouse inventory, and new products are produced and then put into the warehouse.
Parts: Parts shared by multiple products. As long as the production line has spare capacity, a certain amount of inventory can be produced.
When is production triggered? When will production start?
First, the raw material procurement cycle and production cycle should be considered. It takes a certain amount of time from the procurement of raw materials to the completion of production and storage. Assuming that raw material procurement takes 12 days and production takes three days, orders need to be placed at least 15 days in advance to prepare for production. Specific steps are as follows:
Current inventory (trigger condition) | delivery date | Production Date |
<10000 | 7/4 | 7/1 |
14000<stock<15000 | 7/8 | 7/5 |
19000<stock<20000 | 7/13 | 7/10 |
From the above analysis, it can be seen that inventory orders should be created based on current inventory and safety stock standards. The delivery date for an inventory order is determined by the sellable date of the current inventory. Priority will be given to those with a short marketable date.
After receiving the customer’s order, the customer’s order is first shipped using inventory. After the inventory is deducted, Planmate creates an inventory production work order based on the inventory after deducting the customer’s order to maintain safety stock levels. If the inventory is insufficient for delivery, a production work order is created and production line production is arranged.
PlanMateAPS Solution:
The above analysis seems simple for a single product, but if there are many products, it is very difficult to manually accurately calculate the quantity and production date of the inventory order for each product and meet the demand for equipment production capacity. To maintain reasonable inventory levels, you need the help of APS.
The demand management module in PlanMateAPS can automatically create inventory work orders based on user-defined safety stock parameters.
After the order is created and after the initial trial scheduling, the user can appropriately adjust the quantity and delivery date of the work order based on the equipment load and delay shown in the Gantt chart. If production capacity is insufficient, the order quantity will be reduced and the delivery date will be modified. Excess capacity increases inventory production. If the overall situation is reasonable but the distribution is uneven, the demand dates can be adjusted back and forth appropriately. The adjustment work can be repeated several times until the result is satisfactory.