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Glossary
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carrying cost  see holding cost.
cycle counting  physically counting items in inventory.
decoupling (internal operations)  strategic placement of inventories so that one section of the plant is not adversely affected by bottlenecks in other sections.
demand  the rate at which stock is used.
Economic order quantity (EOQ)  the lot size that balances holding costs against ordering or setup costs, so as to minimize the net cost of stocking inventory.
economic production quantity (EPQ)  an economic order quantity, when stock replenishment occurs through production rather than by purchase.
excess cost  the unrecovered cost per unit of items that are left in inventory at the end of the period.
fixed-order-interval model  a model for inventory control that assumes orders will be place at fixed intervals of time.
hedge  holding inventory as a protection against future possible shortages or price increase.
holding cost  the cost per unit of holding an item for a stated period of time, usually one year.
independent demand  demand estimates for an item of inventory that are not governed controlled by demand estimates for any other item.
inventory  a stock or store of goods.
inventory turnover  ratio of average cost of goods sold to average inventory investment.
lead time  the length of time between the placing of an order and receiving it.
lead-time variability  in those cases where the lead time is not known with certainty, lead time variability is measured by the standard deviation of the number of days in lead time.
ordering cost  the cost of ordering and receiving inventory, excluding the cost of the goods themselves.
periodic inventory system  physical counts of items in inventory made at periodic intervals (weekly, monthly, etc.)
perpetual inventory system  system that keeps track of removals from inventory continuously , thus monitoring the current stock of each item.
point of sale system (POS)  method for electronically tracking sales and inventory.
pricebreak  where quantity discounting is practiced, a price break is a quantity at which a lower price is offered.
quantity discount  a reduction in price per unit, as an incentive for making purchases in larger quantities.
reorder point (ROP)  a level of stock at which a replenishment is ordered.
safety stock  stock that is held in excess of expected demand due to variable demand or variable lead time.
salvage value  the recoverable cost of an item that remains in inventory at the end of the period. This may be negative; there may be an additional cost to dispose of an item.
service level  defined as the probability of being able to satisfy any order during the normal order cycle from stock on hand.
setup cost  the cost of preparing the equipment or machines to produce the job, such as cleaning, adjusting, etc., excluding the cost of the product itself.
shortage cost  the loss per unit incurred when demand exceeds supply of an item during a period.
single-period model  inventory model used for ordering perishables and other items with limited useful lives.
standard normal distribution  the distribution of the standard normal statistic z, with a mean of zero and a variance of one.
stockout  running out of stock, before the next replenishment is received.
two-bin system  two containers of inventory; reorder when the first one is empty.
universal product code  a bar code printed on an item tag or on packaging.
vendor-managed inventory system  the supplier has the responsibility for inventory replenishment.







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