Inventory and stock control Management is critical in operations as inventory is a current asset to a firm. Carrying inventory comes with a certain degree of risk. This risk is a component of the cost of carrying inventory. When a company stocks items in the warehouse there is always the risk that the items may fall in real value during the period they are stored. If a company stored parts for their work centers or equipment, the parts in the warehouse could be worth far less than the price that was originally paid and any losses, excess, obsolete and miss-managed inventory means a reduction in the company equity.
This training seminar in inventory and stock control management focuses on the techniques when companies are looking to reduce costs as at times they ignore the inventory sitting in their warehouses and the cost of carrying that inventory. It is important for businesses to carefully examine all the costs of carrying inventory and determine where they can make changes to reduce that cost and help with the company’s bottom line.
The purpose of this training seminar is to:
Enable delegates to evaluate Inventory visibility levels and segmentation approaches
Examine stocking level criteria through assignment practices
Types of tools used for inventory optimization
Current integration practices between materials management systems and asset management systems
Understanding that minimizing inventory holdings reduces overhead costs and, hence, improves the profitability performance of the enterprise
Understand and implement the \"world class\" tools for managing inventory in the supply chain
Objectives
This seminar will help you learn how to:
Improve management of inventories reaching from receiving products to storage and delivering
See that movement to the end-user adds value
Professionally manage the inventory and supply chain and help you to reduce cost, improve customer satisfaction and increase safety and productivity.
Look “outside of the box”
Understand the appropriate Inventory methods to be applied
Establish more accurate forecast demands and maximize the degree of service by reducing your inventory with a time-conscious and integrated inventory management process
Training Methodology
The training seminar will be presented by a competent Professional who has designed successful inventory control measures.
Participants will learn by active participation during the seminar through the use of exercises, questionnaires, syndicate and group discussion, training videos and practical on-hand application of inventory and stock control tools.
Organisational Impact
Examine the link of inventory in the company supply chain operations and activities
Analyse the key areas of operation
Identify and understand key performance indicators
Succeed in improving operations
Apply the right cost and service balance
Gain a competitive advantage
Personal Impact
How to analyse stock and inventory
How to make productivity improvements
Understand the role of inventory in the supply chain
Balancing cost and service requirements
A framework for continual improvement
Best in class practices
Who Should Attend?
Those new to managing inventory
Those non inventory people who need to gain an awareness of the issues and key drivers of stock control operations
Inventory, Stock, Supply Chain, Logistics, Warehouse and Distribution Professionals
Seminar Outline
Inventory and the Supply Chain
Inventory definitions and importance
Inventory flow in the Supply Chain
The Basic Rules of successful Supply Chain
Supply Chain and Inventory dynamics
Financial Management and Inventory
Statistics application in Inventory Control
Truths on Inventory visibility
Key Components to Understanding Effective Inventory Control
End-User Demand Analysis
Forecasting for Operations and Maintenance
Understanding Supply Lead Time
Cost & Benefits analysis
Developing Inventory policies
The need for Inventory in organizations
Inventory Mechanics, Methods and Systems
Basic mechanics of inventory systems
Establishing Order Quantity
Implications of Free stock in inventory
Simple replenishment methods, for example, Min/Max
Replenishment methods, Reorder Point and Reorder Level (ROP/ROL)
Requirements planning systems, Bills of Material and inventory planning
Class assignment inventory control methods
Establishing Stock Control
Establishing Stock Checking
Developing Stock accuracy
Stock tolerances and approvals
Stock reconciliations/discrepancies
Identifying Surplus and obsolescent stock
Identifying different Storage conditions
Understanding Stock coding
Stock Variety reductions
Understanding Inventory Strategies
Creating Inventory Policy
Incoterms and the supply chain rules
Understanding Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) and Co Managed Inventory (CMI)