MBA 206 POM – Unit 3 & 4 Short Notes
MBA 206 · POM · SHORT NOTES

Production & Operation Management
Unit 3 & Unit 4 Notes

Simple language · Real examples · Exam ready · P.R. Pote Patil College, Amravati

Unit 3: Logistics & SCM Unit 4: Work Study & Materials Handling Sem II · MBA 206
UNIT 3

Logistics & Supply Chain Management

Logistics Operations · International Logistics · Reverse Logistics · WMS · MRP & ERP · JIT · IT & Supply Chain

🚚

3.1 Logistics — Meaning & Importance

Definition Logistics is the process of planning, implementing, and controlling the efficient flow and storage of goods, services, and information from the point of origin to the point of consumption to meet customer requirements.

Simple words: Getting the right product, to the right place, at the right time, in the right condition, at the right cost.

Components of Logistics

🚛 Transportation

Moving goods from one place to another — road, rail, air, sea, pipeline.

🏭 Warehousing

Storing goods safely until needed by the next stage or customer.

📦 Inventory Mgmt

Maintaining right stock levels — not too much, not too little.

📋 Order Processing

Receiving, validating, and processing customer orders fast and accurately.

🔖 Packaging

Packing goods to protect during transit and ease handling.

💻 Information Mgmt

Tracking shipments, sharing data between all supply chain partners.

Why Logistics is Important

  • Ensures Product Availability — Without logistics, products cannot reach customers no matter how good they are.
  • Reduces Cost — Efficient logistics reduces transportation, warehouse, and inventory costs → cheaper product for customer.
  • Customer Satisfaction — Fast, accurate, damage-free delivery builds loyalty.
  • Supports Global Trade — Enables countries to import raw materials and export finished goods.
  • Competitive Advantage — Better logistics = deliver faster and cheaper than rivals.
  • Value Addition — Adds Time Utility (when needed) + Place Utility (where needed).
  • Economic Development — Strong logistics infrastructure boosts a nation's GDP. India's PM Gati Shakti aims to cut logistics cost from 13% to 8% of GDP.
Reliance Retail uses powerful logistics to keep shelves stocked in all stores across India. Zomato and Swiggy deliver food in 30 minutes through highly optimized last-mile logistics.
🔗

3.2 Logistics Operations in Supply Chain Network

A Supply Chain is the entire network of organizations, people, activities, and resources involved in moving a product from raw material to the end customer. Logistics keeps this chain moving smoothly.

Supply Chain like a river: Raw materials = source, Customer = sea. Logistics = the water flow. Any blockage (delay, shortage) harms the entire chain.

Supply Chain Structure

Tier 2 Suppliers

Supply raw materials to Tier 1. Iron ore mines → Steel plants

Tier 1 Suppliers

Direct suppliers to manufacturer. Bosch → Maruti Suzuki (brakes)

Manufacturer

Converts inputs to finished goods. Maruti assembles cars

Distributors

Buy bulk from manufacturers, supply retailers. HUL distributors

Retailers

Sell to end consumer. D-Mart, kirana shops

End Customer

Final user of the product.

Types of Logistics Operations

  • Inbound Logistics — Receiving raw materials from suppliers to factory. Includes supplier selection, transport, receiving, inspection, storage. Example: Garment factory receiving cotton fabric from Gujarat suppliers.
  • In-Plant (Internal) Logistics — Movement of materials WITHIN the factory — from raw material store to production, between machines, to finished goods store. Uses forklifts, conveyors, AGVs.
  • Outbound Logistics — Moving finished goods from factory to customer. Includes warehousing, picking, packing, loading, transport, last-mile delivery. Example: HUL distributing Surf Excel, Lifebuoy to every corner of India.

Transportation Modes Comparison

ModeSpeedCostBest For
Road/TruckMediumMediumShort/medium distance, door-to-door flexibility
RailMediumLowBulk goods, long distance in India (coal, grain)
Sea/ShipSlowVery LowInternational trade, heavy/bulk goods
AirVery FastVery HighHigh-value, time-sensitive goods (medicines, electronics)
PipelineContinuousLowestOil, gas, liquids only
Dispatch & Routing: Planning best delivery routes to minimize distance and cost. Modern companies use Vehicle Routing Problem (VRP) software + GPS to automatically optimize routes for delivery vehicles.
🌍

3.3 International Logistics

Definition International Logistics is the management of goods, information, and financial flows across national borders — from country of origin to country of destination.

Far more complex than domestic logistics because it involves multiple countries, languages, currencies, regulations, and customs procedures.

Why International Logistics is Important

  • Enables Global Trade — India exports IT, pharmaceuticals, textiles to the world through international logistics.
  • Access to Raw Materials — Japan imports all crude oil from Middle East through sea freight.
  • Cost Advantage — Manufacturing in low-cost countries → selling in high-price markets. Bangladesh garments reach European consumers.
  • Global Supply Chains — Apple sources chips from Taiwan, screens from South Korea, assembles in China. Only possible with international logistics.
  • Disaster Relief — COVID-19 vaccines transported globally through cold-chain air freight.

Key Components

🚢 Transportation

Sea freight (most common, cheapest), Air freight (fastest, costliest), Road (neighboring countries)

📄 Customs Clearance

Every shipment needs customs approval. Docs: Bill of Lading, Invoice, Packing List, Certificate of Origin. India uses ICEGATE (digital customs).

🤝 Freight Forwarding

Agent who manages entire international shipment — books cargo, prepares documents, arranges customs clearance.

🛡️ Insurance

Marine cargo insurance protects against damage, loss, or theft during transit.

📜 Incoterms

International terms defining buyer/seller responsibilities. FOB = seller responsible until goods loaded on ship.

Maintaining Effectiveness & Efficiency

Effectiveness = Doing the right things (correct goods, right place, on time). Efficiency = Doing things in the right way (minimum cost, minimum waste). Both must go together.

  • Technology (GPS, RFID, TMS) — Real-time visibility of shipments worldwide.
  • Proper Documentation — Accurate documents prevent costly customs delays.
  • Strong Partner Relationships — Reliable shipping lines and freight forwarders ensure consistent quality.
  • Risk Management — Alternative routes, backup carriers, cargo insurance protect against disruptions.
  • KPI Monitoring — Track: On-time delivery rate, customs clearance time, freight cost per unit, damage rate.
  • Lean Logistics — Continuously eliminate waste from logistics processes.
🔄

3.4 Reverse Logistics

Definition Reverse Logistics is the process of moving goods from the customer back to the manufacturer for returns, repairs, recycling, remanufacturing, or disposal. Normal logistics goes forward; Reverse logistics goes backward.
When you return a product to Amazon — Amazon picks it up, transports it back to warehouse, inspects it, decides to resell/repair/dispose. This entire process is Reverse Logistics.

↩️ Returns Management

Managing product returns from customers. Inspection and disposition decision.

🔧 Remanufacturing

Restoring used product to like-new condition. Caterpillar earthmoving equipment — saves 85% vs new parts cost.

♻️ Recycling

Breaking products into raw materials. Tyre companies → rubber granules for road construction.

📱 Refurbishing

Restore to good working condition. Renewed/refurbished iPhones on Amazon.

🗑️ Disposal

Safe disposal of products that cannot be recovered. Expired medicines through authorized waste handlers.

📦 Packaging Recovery

Collecting & reusing packaging. Returnable plastic crates between factories and distributors.
Importance: Customer satisfaction (easy returns = trust) + Cost recovery (resell repaired goods) + Environmental sustainability + Regulatory compliance (India e-waste rules).
🏪

3.5 Warehouse Management System (WMS)

Definition WMS is a software application that controls and manages all day-to-day operations of a warehouse. It is the "brain" of the warehouse — tracking every product, every movement, directing workers to do the right thing at the right time.
Without WMS, a large warehouse is like a library without a catalogue — thousands of books but you cannot find any quickly. WMS creates order out of chaos.

6 Key Functions of WMS

  • Receiving — Records goods arriving, checks against Purchase Order, generates receipt using barcode scanner.
  • Put-Away — Directs workers to the most efficient storage location based on product type and movement frequency.
  • Inventory Tracking — Real-time record of every product — what, how many, exact location (rack/bin), batch, expiry date.
  • Order Picking — Generates optimized pick list, guides workers to collect products in the most efficient sequence.
  • Packing & Dispatch — Guides packing, generates shipping labels, schedules dispatch per carrier pickup times.
  • Reporting & Analytics — Order accuracy, picking speed, stock turnover, space utilization reports for management.
Amazon Fulfilment Centres use WMS + robots (Kiva robots carry entire shelving units to stationary human pickers). WMS tracks every shelf, product, and order in real time.
💻

3.6 MRP & ERP — Fundamentals

MRP — Material Requirements Planning

MRP Definition MRP is a computer-based system that calculates exactly what materials are needed, in what quantities, and by what dates to fulfill the production plan. It works backward from the Master Production Schedule.
MRP = Recipe calculator. If you need to make 100 cakes (MPS) tomorrow, MRP calculates: 100 eggs, 50 kg flour, 20 kg butter needed. Then checks stock and tells you: order 30 more eggs, 20 kg flour — and by when.

MRP 3 Inputs:

  • Master Production Schedule (MPS) — What to produce, how many, in which week.
  • Bill of Materials (BOM) — Complete list of all materials needed to make one unit.
  • Inventory Records — Current stock levels of all materials.

🔢 MRP Calculation Example

Need: 200 units of Product X in Week 5. Each needs 3 units of Component A. Lead time = 2 weeks. Stock on hand = 100 units.
Gross requirement = 200 × 3 = 600 units
Net requirement = 600 − 100 = 500 units
Order by: Week 5 − 2 weeks = Week 3
→ Place order for 500 units of A in Week 3

ERP — Enterprise Resource Planning

ERP Definition ERP is an integrated software system managing ALL core business processes — production, purchasing, sales, finance, HR, inventory — on one platform with a single shared database.
ERP = Central nervous system of a company. Just as the brain coordinates all body functions, ERP coordinates all business departments. Example: Tata Motors uses SAP ERP — a dealer books a car in Delhi → SAP automatically updates production planning, materials ordering, financial billing, and logistics dispatch — all simultaneously.

Evolution

MRP → MRP II (+ capacity) → ERP (+ finance, HR, sales, all functions)

Key Modules

Production, Materials, Sales, Finance, HR, Quality Management

Popular ERP

SAP (Tata, Reliance), Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics, Tally (Indian SMEs)

Benefits

Single source of truth, no data duplication, real-time decisions, lower cost

3.7 Just-in-Time (JIT) — Objectives & Benefits

Definition (N.G. Nair, Tata McGraw Hill) "Just-in-Time is a production strategy that strives to improve business return on investment by reducing in-process inventory and associated carrying costs." — Produce and deliver materials EXACTLY when needed. Not before. Not after.
Toyota's production system: Instead of large stocks of car parts, suppliers deliver parts to the assembly line in small quantities exactly when needed — sometimes multiple deliveries per day from nearby suppliers.

6 Objectives of JIT

  • Zero Inventory — Ideal goal: materials arrive exactly when needed, no warehouse buffer stock.
  • Zero Defects — No buffer stock to hide defects. Everyone must maintain very high quality.
  • Zero Waste (Muda Elimination) — Eliminate 7 types of waste: Overproduction, Waiting, Transport, Over-processing, Excess Inventory, Unnecessary Motion, Defects.
  • Reduced Lead Time — Shorter time between customer order and delivery.
  • Flexible Production — Switch quickly between products to match actual demand.
  • Continuous Improvement (Kaizen) — Every day, everyone looks for ways to reduce waste and improve.

Benefits of JIT

💰 Reduced Inventory Cost

Less capital blocked. Less warehouse needed. Dell assembled computers only after orders — near-zero finished goods inventory.

✅ Improved Quality

No buffer = defects caught immediately. Toyota has lowest defect rates in automotive industry globally.

📉 Lower Cost

Eliminating waste = lower cost per unit.

🚀 Faster Response

Quickly adjust production to match what customers are buying today.

🤝 Better Suppliers

Long-term partnerships with reliable suppliers → better quality, lower prices.

🏭 Less Space

Minimal inventory → less warehouse space needed.
Maruti Suzuki's Manesar plant: Suppliers like Bharat Forge and Motherson deliver components directly to assembly line multiple times per day from their supplier park located RIGHT NEXT TO the plant. This is JIT in India.
📡

3.8 Information Technology & Supply Chain

IT is the backbone of modern supply chain. It provides Visibility (see everything in real time), Connectivity (all parties connected), and Intelligence (data analytics for better decisions).

📊 ERP (SAP)

Integrates all business functions on one platform. Real-time data across departments.

🏪 WMS

Warehouse Management System. Manages all warehouse operations.

🚛 TMS

Transport Management System. Route optimization, carrier selection, shipment tracking.

📄 EDI

Electronic Data Interchange. Digital exchange of business documents (PO, invoices) between companies.

📶 Barcode & RFID

Automatic product tracking. RFID reads without line-of-sight — pallets tracked automatically.

📍 GPS Tracking

Real-time vehicle tracking. All DTDC, Blue Dart vehicles GPS-tracked.

☁️ Cloud Computing

Access supply chain software from anywhere. AWS powers thousands of supply chain systems.

🤖 AI / ML

Predict demand, optimize inventory, plan routes. Amazon pre-positions products near customers BEFORE order is placed.

⛓️ Blockchain

Immutable record of all supply chain transactions. Walmart tracks fresh produce source in seconds using blockchain.

🌐 IoT

Connected sensors send real-time data. Temperature sensors in cold chain trucks alert if temp rises above safe level.
Flipkart's supply chain uses AI demand forecasting + WMS across 70+ fulfilment centres + TMS for route optimization + real-time order tracking. This IT backbone enables processing millions of orders daily with 1-2 day delivery.

⚡ Unit 3 — Quick Revision Flash Points

  • Logistics: Right product, place, time, condition, cost. Components: Transport, Warehouse, Inventory, Order Processing, Packaging, Info Mgmt.
  • Supply Chain: Tier 2 Suppliers → Tier 1 → Manufacturer → Distributors → Retailers → Customer
  • Logistics Types: Inbound (to factory) + In-plant (inside factory) + Outbound (to customer)
  • Transport Modes: Road (flexible) | Rail (bulk, cheap) | Sea (international, slowest, cheapest) | Air (fastest, costliest) | Pipeline (liquids)
  • International Logistics: Sea/Air transport + Customs + Freight forwarder + Insurance + Incoterms
  • Reverse Logistics: Returns → Remanufacturing → Refurbishing → Recycling → Disposal → Packaging recovery
  • WMS Functions: Receiving → Put-away → Inventory tracking → Picking → Packing → Reporting
  • MRP Inputs: MPS + BOM + Inventory Records → Output: Order dates and quantities
  • ERP: Integrated system for entire enterprise. MRP → MRP II → ERP. SAP used by Tata Motors.
  • JIT Objectives: Zero inventory, zero defects, zero waste (Muda), reduced lead time, flexible production, Kaizen
  • IT Tools: ERP, WMS, TMS, EDI, RFID, GPS, Cloud, AI/ML, Blockchain, IoT
UNIT 4

Work & Method Study and Materials Handling

Work Study · Method Study · Data Recording · Work Measurement · Work Sampling · Materials Handling · Inventory Control

🔬

4.1 Work Study — Basics

Definition (British Standards Institution) "Work Study is a generic term for techniques — particularly Method Study and Work Measurement — used in examination of human work in all contexts, leading to investigation of all factors affecting efficiency and economy, to effect improvement."

Simple words: Work Study finds the best way to do a job and then measures how long it should take. Goal: Maximum output with minimum effort, time, and cost.

📐 Method Study (HOW?)

Finding the best, most efficient way to do a job. Qualitative — about process improvement.

⏱️ Work Measurement (HOW LONG?)

Measuring standard time for a qualified worker to do the job. Quantitative — sets the time standard.

Objectives of Work Study

  • Find the most efficient method — eliminate unnecessary, wasteful steps.
  • Set Standard Times for tasks — used for planning, scheduling, and wage systems.
  • Improve resource utilization — reduce idle time and waste.
  • Reduce fatigue — better working methods improve safety and comfort.
  • Improve product quality — standardize best method for all workers.
  • Provide scientific basis for wage incentive schemes.
📐

4.2 Method Study & Data Recording Techniques

Method Study is systematic recording and critical examination of existing methods to develop easier, more effective ways of working and reducing costs.

Restaurant Kitchen: Method Study observes how a cook works — do they walk across the kitchen for every spice? Are utensils logically placed? Could steps be combined? Redesigning layout and cooking sequence makes the cook more efficient without working harder.

SREDIM — 6 Steps of Method Study

  • S — SELECT the job to study. Choose bottlenecks, high-labour-cost jobs, safety risks, or worker complaints.
  • R — RECORD all facts about the existing method using process charts, flow diagrams, etc. Capture what is ACTUALLY happening.
  • E — EXAMINE the facts critically. Ask: What? Why? Where? When? Who? How? Then: What ELSE? Why else? etc.
  • D — DEVELOP the best alternative — eliminate unnecessary activities, combine operations, change sequence, simplify.
  • I — INSTALL the new method — train workers, modify equipment, implement on shop floor.
  • M — MAINTAIN the new method — monitor workers are following it. Update if conditions change.

Data Recording Techniques

A. Process Charts — 5 ASME Symbols:

SymbolNameMeaningExample
O (Circle)OperationValue added to productDrilling a hole, painting a surface
→ (Arrow)TransportMaterial or person movesMoving parts from lathe to drilling machine
D (Half Circle)DelayTemporary, unplanned waitingParts waiting for next machine to be free
▽ (Triangle)StoragePlanned, controlled storageFinished goods in warehouse
□ (Square)InspectionQuality check vs standardChecking dimensions of machined part

Types of Process Charts

  • Outline Process Chart — Shows only main operations and inspections. High-level overview.
  • Flow Process Chart — Shows ALL 5 activity types in detail for ONE material/person. Most commonly used.
  • Two-Handed Process Chart — Shows both hands of a worker simultaneously. Used for repetitive assembly.
  • Multiple Activity Chart — Shows activities of multiple workers/machines on same time scale. Identifies idle time.

B. Flow Diagram & String Diagram:

  • Flow Diagram — Scale drawing of workplace layout showing actual movement paths of materials/workers. Reveals inefficient travel routes.
  • String Diagram — Scale floor plan with pins at each location. Thread wound around pins shows travel sequence. Total thread length = total distance traveled.
Hospital nurse string diagram: Revealed she walks 5 km per shift collecting medicines and equipment. By redesigning storage locations, distance cut to 2 km — saving time and reducing fatigue.

C. SIMO Chart: Records activities of both hands at the level of basic motions called Therbligs (18 basic motions: Reach, Grasp, Move, Position, Release, etc.). Used for very repetitive short-cycle assembly operations.

⏱️

4.3 Work Measurement & Work Sampling

Work Measurement Definition Establishing the time for a qualified worker to carry out a specified job at a defined level of performance. Output = Standard Time — used for production planning, scheduling, cost estimation, and wage incentives.

Time Study (Stop-Watch Study) — Steps

  • Select the job and inform the worker being observed.
  • Break job into small elements (e.g., pick up part / position in jig / tighten bolt / remove).
  • Time each element for 20-30 cycles using stopwatch.
  • Rate the worker's performance (100% = normal pace, 120% = faster, 80% = slower than normal).
  • Calculate Normal Time: Normal Time = Observed Time × (Rating ÷ 100)
  • Add Allowances (personal needs, fatigue, unavoidable delays) → Standard Time
STANDARD TIME FORMULA Standard Time = Normal Time + Allowances
Normal Time = Observed Time × (Performance Rating ÷ 100)

✅ Solved Numerical Example

Average observed time = 3 minutes per cycle
Performance rating = 120% (worker faster than normal)
Allowances = 15% of Normal Time
Normal Time = 3 × (120 ÷ 100) = 3 × 1.2 = 3.6 minutes
Allowances = 15% of 3.6 = 0.54 minutes
Standard Time = 3.6 + 0.54 = 4.14 minutes
→ Output rate = 60 ÷ 4.14 ≈ 14-15 units per hour

Work Sampling (Activity Sampling)

Work Sampling Definition Making a large number of instantaneous, random observations of workers or machines over time. Each observation simply records what they are doing at that instant — working or idle. From the proportion of observations, percentage of time on each activity is estimated.
Like estimating how much your dog sleeps — instead of watching for a week, look at the dog at 100 random moments. If sleeping in 60 of 100 observations → dog sleeps 60% of time. Work Sampling uses the same logic for workers and machines.

Work Sampling Steps

  • Define activities to observe (working, idle-breakdown, idle-material shortage, personal time).
  • Determine number of observations needed (statistical formula based on accuracy required).
  • Prepare random observation schedule — when exactly to observe.
  • Make observations at scheduled random times, record what each worker/machine is doing.
  • Calculate: % time on each activity = (observations in category ÷ total) × 100

✅ Work Sampling Example

5 machines, 5 days, 400 random observations:
Working: 280 observations | Breakdown idle: 60 | Material shortage: 40 | Setup: 20
Machine utilization = 280 ÷ 400 = 70%
Breakdown idle = 60 ÷ 400 = 15%
Material shortage idle = 40 ÷ 400 = 10%
→ Improving material supply could recover 10% of machine capacity!

PMTS (Predetermined Motion Time Systems): Build standard time from a database of standard times for basic human motions (Reach, Grasp, Move, Position). MTM system is most used. No actual timing needed — useful for jobs that don't yet exist.

🏗️

4.4 Principles & Types of Materials Handling

Definition (Martand Telsang, S. Chand) "Materials Handling is the art and science of moving, packing, and storing of substances in any form." It is a non-value-adding but essential activity — it does not change the product, only moves it. Poor handling = wasted time + damage + accidents + higher costs.

10 Principles of Materials Handling

  • Planning Principle — All materials handling must be planned as a complete system. Random movement is wasteful.
  • Unit Load Principle — Move materials in the largest practical unit load. Moving one container of 100 parts is more efficient than 100 individual trips.
  • Space Utilization — Use all three dimensions — floor space AND height. Racking systems allow vertical stacking.
  • Gravity Principle — Use gravity wherever possible. Chutes and slides reduce energy cost.
  • Mechanization Principle — Use machines (forklifts, conveyors, cranes) instead of manual labour wherever possible.
  • Standardization Principle — Standardize equipment, containers, and methods for interchangeability and simplicity.
  • Safety Principle — Equipment maintained, operators trained, safe work practices enforced at all times.
  • Flow Principle — Materials should flow smoothly with minimum backtracking, cross-traffic, or congestion.
  • Minimum Handling — Each handling = risk of damage + cost. Minimize the number of times materials are touched.
  • Environment Principle — Minimize noise, vibration, dust, and environmental impact on workers.

Types of Materials Handling Equipment

A. Conveyors — Continuous mechanical devices moving materials along a fixed path:

Belt Conveyor

Belt on rollers carries materials. Coal at power plant, airport baggage.

Roller Conveyor

Boxes on rollers under gravity/power. Courier parcel sorting.

Chain Conveyor

Chain drives heavy items. Car bodies in painting booth.

Screw Conveyor

Rotating helix moves powder/granules. Cement, grain.

Pneumatic Conveyor

Air pressure moves powder through pipes. Pharma, food industry.

B. Cranes & Hoists — Lift and move heavy materials:

EOT Crane (Overhead)

Runs on ceiling rails. Lifts tonnes of load. Steel plants moving steel coils.

Jib Crane

Fixed to wall, rotates in arc. Lighter loads at specific workstation.

Gantry Crane

Ground-level rails. Shipyards, heavy engineering.

Chain/Electric Hoist

Simple vertical lifting. Common in machine shops.

C. Industrial Trucks (Vehicles) — Mobile, flexible path handling:

🏎️ Forklift

Most widely used. Two forks slide under pallet. Lifts 1-5 tonnes. Used in every Indian factory and warehouse.

Hand Pallet Truck

Manual pump truck. Short-distance pallet movement within warehouse.

Reach Truck

Narrow aisle forklift. Reaches up to 12 meters high in high-bay warehouses.

🤖 AGV (Automated Guided Vehicle)

Computer-controlled, no human driver. Follows magnetic/laser path. Amazon Kiva robots carry entire shelving units.

D. AS/RS (Automated Storage & Retrieval Systems) — Computer-controlled stacker cranes that automatically store and retrieve loads in high-bay warehouses. Operates 24/7, no human error. Used in pharmaceutical distribution warehouses.

🛒

4.5 Purchase & Stores Management

Purchase Management Definition (P. Gopalakrishnan, McGraw Hill) "Purchasing is the function responsible for obtaining by purchase, lease, or other legal means equipment, materials, supplies, and services required by an undertaking." — Right quantity, right quality, right source, right price, right time.

Purchase cost = 40-70% of total production cost in manufacturing companies. That's why effective purchasing directly impacts profitability.

7 Steps of Purchase Process

  • Purchase Requisition — A department sends formal request to Purchase dept for materials needed.
  • Supplier Identification & Enquiry — Send Request for Quotation (RFQ) to potential suppliers.
  • Quotation Analysis & Supplier Selection — Compare quotes on price, quality, delivery, reliability. Select best.
  • Purchase Order (PO) — Formal legal document: what to supply, quantity, quality, delivery date, price.
  • Follow-up — Monitor supplier to ensure on-time delivery.
  • Receiving & Inspection — Check goods against PO and quality standards. Accept or reject.
  • Invoice Verification & Payment — Verify invoice against PO and goods received, then pay.

Stores Management — 6 Functions

  • Receiving — Accept deliveries, verify quantity and quality against Purchase Order.
  • Storage — Store in designated locations (bins, racks, shelves) safely and organized.
  • Issue — Issue materials to production against Material Requisition. Maintain records of all issues.
  • Record Keeping — Bin cards and stock ledgers showing receipts, issues, and balances for every item.
  • Physical Verification — Regular physical stock counting. Investigate and correct discrepancies with records.
  • Housekeeping & Safety — Clean, safe, well-organized stores. Fire safety and chemical storage compliance.
📊

4.6 Inventory Control — Concepts, Models & Applications

Definition (S.N. Chary, McGraw Hill) "Inventory control is the technique of maintaining stock items of a business at a desired level — whether raw materials, work-in-progress, or finished goods." Too much = capital blocked + storage cost. Too little = production stops + lost sales.

Types of Inventory

Raw Material

Purchased from suppliers. Steel plates, cotton yarn, crude oil.

Work-in-Progress (WIP)

Partially completed products on factory floor.

Finished Goods

Completed products ready for dispatch to customers.

MRO Stock

Maintenance, Repair, Operations — spare parts, tools, lubricants. Not in product but essential.

3 Types of Inventory Costs

  • Ordering Cost — Fixed cost per order placed (admin, phone, receiving, inspection). Same whether ordering 10 or 1,000 units.
  • Carrying Cost (Holding Cost) — Cost of holding stock over time (interest on capital, warehouse rent, insurance, obsolescence). Typically 15-30% of inventory value per year.
  • Stockout Cost — Cost of running out of stock (lost sales, production stoppage, emergency procurement at higher price, customer damage).
Key Trade-off: Higher order quantity → Less ordering cost (fewer orders) + More carrying cost (more average stock). EOQ finds the optimal balance point.

EOQ — Economic Order Quantity Model

EOQ is the order quantity that minimizes total annual inventory cost (ordering cost + carrying cost). Developed by F.W. Harris, 1913.

EOQ FORMULA EOQ = √( 2 × D × Co / Cc )

D = Annual demand (units/year)
Co = Ordering cost per order (Rs.)
Cc = Carrying cost per unit per year (Rs.)

✅ Solved EOQ Numerical

Annual demand D = 10,000 units/year
Ordering cost Co = Rs. 200 per order
Carrying cost Cc = Rs. 4 per unit per year
EOQ = √(2 × 10,000 × 200 ÷ 4) = √(1,000,000) = 1,000 units
Orders per year = 10,000 ÷ 1,000 = 10 orders
Average inventory = 1,000 ÷ 2 = 500 units
Annual ordering cost = 10 × Rs.200 = Rs. 2,000
Annual carrying cost = 500 × Rs.4 = Rs. 2,000
→ Total Cost = Rs. 4,000/year (minimum possible). Note: At EOQ, Ordering Cost = Carrying Cost always.

Reorder Point (ROP)

REORDER POINT ROP = Lead Time (days) × Daily Demand (units/day)

With Safety Stock: ROP = (Lead Time × Daily Demand) + Safety Stock
Daily demand = 50 units. Lead time = 5 days. ROP = 5 × 50 = 250 units. When stock falls to 250 units → place order immediately. Order arrives exactly when stock = zero.

ABC Analysis

Classifies inventory by annual consumption value (annual demand × unit price) to focus control effort where it matters most.

Category% of Items% of Annual ValueControl LevelExample
A ItemsTop 10-15%70-80% of valueVery tight — daily review, accurate recordsExpensive components, engines
B Items30-40%15-25% of valueModerate — weekly/monthly reviewMedium value parts
C Items45-60%Only 5-10% of valueSimple — bulk order, periodic countNuts, bolts, stationery
Car factory: Engines (Category A) — monitored daily. Windshield wipers (Category B) — monitored weekly. Nuts and bolts (Category C) — just order in bulk once a month and keep in open bin.

VED Analysis (Spare Parts)

  • V — Vital — Without this, production stops COMPLETELY. Must always be in stock. Main bearing of the only press machine.
  • E — Essential — Without this, production is severely disrupted. Maintain reasonable stock.
  • D — Desirable — Minor inconvenience if unavailable. Can wait for normal procurement. Spare office light bulbs.

4 Inventory Control Systems

Q-System (EOQ System)

Fixed ORDER QUANTITY (EOQ) whenever stock hits Reorder Point. Quantity fixed, timing varies.

P-System (Periodic Review)

Review inventory at FIXED INTERVALS (e.g., every 2 weeks). Order quantity varies each time.

Two-Bin System

Simple visual system for C-items. When Bin 1 empties → place order. Use Bin 2 while waiting.

Kanban System

JIT-based pull system. Production triggered by actual consumption, not forecast. Toyota uses Kanban cards between assembly stations.

⚡ Unit 4 — Quick Revision Flash Points

  • Work Study: 2 branches: Method Study (HOW) + Work Measurement (HOW LONG)
  • Method Study Steps (SREDIM): Select → Record → Examine → Develop → Install → Maintain
  • 5 ASME Symbols: O=Operation | →=Transport | D=Delay | ▽=Storage | □=Inspection
  • Standard Time Formula: Std Time = Normal Time + Allowances. Normal Time = Observed Time × (Rating ÷ 100)
  • Work Sampling: Random observations estimate % time on activities. Non-intrusive, economical, studies many workers at once.
  • Materials Handling Principles: Planning, Unit Load, Space Utilization, Gravity, Mechanization, Standardization, Safety, Flow, Minimum Handling, Environment
  • Equipment Types: Conveyors (belt/roller/chain/screw/pneumatic) | Cranes (EOT/Jib/Gantry) | Trucks (Forklift/AGV) | AS/RS
  • Purchase Steps: Requisition → Enquiry → Quotation → PO → Follow-up → Receiving → Payment
  • Stores Functions: Receiving, Storage, Issue, Records, Physical Verification, Housekeeping
  • EOQ Formula: √(2 × D × Co ÷ Cc). At EOQ: Ordering Cost = Carrying Cost
  • ROP Formula: Lead Time × Daily Demand (+ Safety Stock for uncertainty)
  • ABC: A = 10-15% items, 70-80% value (tight) | B = moderate | C = 45-60% items, 5-10% value (loose)
  • VED: Vital (production stops) | Essential (severe disruption) | Desirable (minor inconvenience)
  • Control Systems: Q-System (fixed qty) | P-System (fixed period) | Two-Bin (visual) | Kanban (JIT pull)
Scroll to Top