Liquidating Non-Moving Inventory
Calculating Your Target Inventory Investment
Encouraging Inventory Accuracy
Vendor Managed Inventory There More To It Than Just Selling Products
Make This Year Physical Inventory More Accurate and Less Painful
Implementing Effective Inventory Management
Why Is Inventory Turnover Important?
Do You Monitor Your Residual Inventory?
Put Your Time to the Best Use The Myth of Disposing of Dead Inventory
There's No Such Thing as Free Inventory
Can You Predict if Inventory Will Die in Your Warehouse?
Does Your New Inventory Contribute to Dead Stock?
The Cascading Effect of Effective Inventory Management
Controlling Open-Stock Inventory
A Questionnaire for New Inventory Items
Liquidate All Slow-Moving Inventory?
Analyzing Inventory Adjustments
Consider if Some Inventory Will Need To Be Buried
The Mysterious Cost of Carrying Inventory
How hard is the money you have invested working for you? You probably been
asked that question several times by stock brokers or "investment counselors."
No, Im not going to try to sell you mutual funds. This article isn't about how
you are managing your personal investments. Instead, we are going to look at the
performance of your company largest asset: inventory.
The Concept of Inventory Turnover
Say you sell $10,000 worth of a product (at cost) each year. Total revenue
received from sales of the product is $12,500. If we bought the entire $10,000
worth of the product on January 1st, at the end of the year we would have made a
$2,500 gross profit on an investment of $10,000.
But do we have to buy the entire $10,000 worth of the product at one time?
What if we bought $5,000 worth of the product on January 1st. Then, just before
running out of stock, we bought an additional $5,000 worth of the product with
part of the revenues received from selling the first shipment. At the end of the
year weĉгe still sold $10,000 worth of the product, still made $2,500 gross
profit, but on an investment of about $5,000.
Could we make the same gross profit on an even smaller investment? What if we
were to buy $2,500 dollars worth of material. Sell most of it. Buy another
$2,500 dollars worth of the product. Sell most of that shipment and then repeat
the process two more times before the end of the year. The annual gross profit
of $2,500 is now generated with an investment of about $2,500.
Which investment option is better? Selling $10,000 worth of a product (and
making $2,500 gross profit) with an investment of $10,000, $5,000 or $2,500? The
best option is $2,500. Investing $2,500 (rather than $10,000) frees up $7,500
that can be used for other purposes... such as stocking other products that have
the potential of generating additional profits.
Every time we sell an amount of a product, product line, or other group of
items equal to the average amount of money we have invested in those items, we
have "turned" our inventory. The inventory turnover rate measures the number of
times we have turned our inventory during the past 12 months. Here is a list of
the turnover rates from our example:
Annual Cost of Goods Sold |
Inventory Investment |
Annual Inventory Turns |
| $10,000 |
$10,000 |
1 |
| $10,000 |
$5,000 |
2 |
| $10,000 |
$2,500 |
4 |
The Inventory Turnover Formula
Inventory turnover is calculated with the following formula:
Cost of Goods Sold from Stock Sales during the Past 12 Months
Average Inventory Investment during the Past 12 Months
There are several things to keep in mind when calculating turnover rates:
-
Only consider cost of goods sold from stock sales which are filled from
warehouse inventory. Non-stock items and direct shipments are not included.
Sure, these sales are important, but do't involve your warehouse stock (i.e.
your investment in inventory).
-
The cost of goods sold figure in the formula includes transfers of stocked
products to other branches and quantities of these products used for internal
purposes such as repairs and assemblies.
-
Inventory turnover is based on the cost of items (what you paid for them) not
sales dollars (what you sold them for).
Inventory turnover depends on the average value of stocked inventory. To
determine your average inventory investment:
-
Calculate the total value of every product in inventory (quantity on-hand
times cost) every month, on the same day of the month. Be sure to be consistent
in using the same cost basis (average cost, last cost, replacement cost, etc.)
in calculating both the cost of goods sold and average inventory investment.
-
If your inventory levels tends to fluctuate throughout the month, calculate
your total inventory value on the first and fifteenth of every month.
-
Determine the average inventory value by averaging of all of inventory
valuations recorded during the past 12 months.
Turnover Goals
As you determine your inventory turnover goals, consider the average gross
margin you receive on the sale of products. Most distributors who have 20% - 30%
gross margins should strive to achieve an overall turnover rate of five to six
turns per year. Distributors with lower margins require higher stock turnover.
If your company enjoys high gross margins, you can afford to turn your inventory
less often.
A turnover rate of six turns per year does't mean that the stock of every
item will turn six times. The stock of popular, fast moving items should turn
more often (up to 12 times per year). Slow moving items may turn only once, or
not at all.
Finally, calculate inventory turnover separately for every product line in
every warehouse. This will allow you to identify situations in which your
inventory is not providing an adequate return on your investment. To improve
inventory turnover, consider reducing the quantity you normally buy from the
supplier. Inventory turns improve when you buy less of product, more often.
You have limited funds available to invest in inventory. You cannot stock a
lifetime supply of every item. In order to generate the cash necessary to pay
your bills and return a profit, you must sell the material youĉгe bought. The
inventory turnover rate measures how quickly you are moving inventory through
your warehouse. Combined with other measurements such as customer service level
and return on investment, inventory turnover can provide an accurate barometer
of your success. |