Inventory management, embracing the digital future

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19th April, 2021

Inventory management tools and techniques

When you consider that some businesses might need to keep tabs on hundreds of thousands of stock items, there’s little wonder inventory management tools are so integral.

Managing inventory is a big deal for many businesses, particularly in manufacturing and wholesale. Inventory records are the most likely area of the business to be computerised and every ERP system and CRM system is built around an inventory management function.

Basic inventory management maintains what’s called a ‘perpetual inventory record’. Put simply, the system accepts inventory movement reports (transactions) and maintains a continuous record of the quantity on-hand.

Of course, inventory management software does a lot more than that. Here are some of the tools that can and should be integrated with inventory management to give you the control and visibility you need to support efficient operations.

1. Barcode data collection

The perpetual inventory system is highly dependent on timely and accurate reporting.

Manual reporting can be plagued by delays, errors, missing transactions, and undue burden on the workforce to collect and enter the data.

Automated data collection, most often through barcode scans, removes much of the reporting burden, while greatly improving accuracy and timeliness of transactions.

2. Cycle counting to improve accuracy

Inventory accuracy is very important to the effective planning and control of inventory. Sadly, most inventory tracking systems are woefully inaccurate without an active and disciplined cycle counting system in place.

Cycle counting replaces the cumbersome and error-prone periodic (usually annual) physical inventory count with a regular program of counting selected items so that more important items are counted more often that less important ones.

The magic of cycle counting is that it provides a structure for identifying and eliminating the source of errors to improve accuracy in a sustainable way.

READ: CRM workflow: What it is and how it benefits your business

3. ABC analysis for prioritisation

Cycle counting is usually set up using ABC analysis to identify the more important and less important items mentioned above.

The most common ABC analysis (also called Pareto analysis) method is to rank all inventory items according to the total value of each on an annual basis (annual “usage” or movement times unit cost).

Typically, the top 20 percent of items represent 80 percent of the annual value through the warehouse (80/20 rule). The next 30 percent (B items) account for 15 percent of the value and the remaining 50 percent, the C items, total five percent of annual value.

In addition to setting cycle counting frequency, ABC classifications should drive item location in the warehouse, lot sizing and safety stock rules, and other management parameters to put your focus on the items that matter, where you can get the most return for your investment.

READ: Business systems: What are they and how will they help your business?

4. Integrated planning and execution

The primary focus of ERP is to improve customer service (meeting demand) while optimising resources including inventory (and reducing costs).

While the inventory system provides critical information for the planning and execution systems within ERP, these functions return the favour by managing the use and replenishment of inventory to minimise shortages and lowering the overall inventory investment.

READ: How to use ERP workflows to spin up operational profitability

5. Lot tracking and traceability

Not every company needs serial number or lot tracking traceability, but more and more are collecting this information in recognition of the increasing risk of product recalls.

In addition, life-cycle information, genealogy, configuration history and product performance data can be of great value to engineering, development, product servicing, spare part provisioning, and other areas of the business.

Inventory tracking is a requirement for financial control and basic business management processes. But inventory management and inventory data can be a valuable resource in the quest for performance improvement, higher levels of customer service, cost control, product development, and overall business success.

Integrated inventory management systems, a critical part of any ERP, provide the basic tools and significant additional capabilities to make ERP of increasing utility, catered to a bigger business’s needs.

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