Managing Inventory
Inventory Management is the process of planning, controlling, and optimizing materials, spares, consumables, and tools to ensure availability without excess cost—especially critical for maintenance operations.
Objectives of Inventory Management
- Avoid stock-outs and production stoppage
- Reduce overstocking & carrying cost
- Improve visibility & traceability
- Support preventive & breakdown maintenance
- Enable data-driven purchasing decisions
Key Elements of Inventory Management
Inventory Classification
- Spares – Bearings, motors, sensors
- Consumables – Lubricants, filters, gloves
- Critical / Non-critical items
- ABC Analysis (A = high value, C = low value)
Stock Level Control
- Minimum, Maximum & Reorder Level (ROL)
- Safety stock definition
- Lead-time-based planning
- Overstock & stock-out alerts
Issue, Receipt & Return
- GRN (Goods Receipt Note) entry
- Issue against maintenance work orders
- Return unused spares to store
- Scrap / obsolete item handling
Barcode / QR Code Tracking
- Fast issue & receipt
- Accurate stock updates
- Easy physical verification
- Reduced manual errors
Vendor & Purchase Management
- Approved supplier list
- Lead time tracking
- Purchase Requisition (PR) & PO linkage
- Vendor performance evaluation
Inventory Audit & Control
- Cycle counting
- Physical vs system stock reconciliation
- Obsolete & slow-moving analysis
Typical Inventory Workflow
- Create item master
- Define Min / Max / ROL
- Receive material (GRN)
- Issue against WO / department
- Auto stock update
- Reorder alert & procurement
Key Inventory KPIs
- Inventory turnover ratio
- Stock-out frequency
- Carrying cost
- Slow / non-moving items
- Inventory valuation
Benefits
- Reduced downtime
- Lower inventory cost
- Better maintenance planning
- Improved audit compliance
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