inventory & warehouse management
What is Effective Inventory Management?
Inventory management is the practice of successfully charting and tracking your business’s inventory. At its best, good inventory management has the ability to:
- Improve inventory levels
- Increase warehouse productivity
- Maximize profits
What are the Three Major Inventory Management Techniques?
There are various ways to manage inventory, but some have more popularity than others. The three most prevalent are:
- Push system for inventory management
- Pull system for managing inventory
- Just-in-time inventory management system
Conversely, the pull system relies on stocking an item as and when a customer asks for it. Rather than traveling down the supply chain, goods travel up it. This works effectively as a form of inventory management for low-demand or expensive items. However, it’s unusual for a business to apply the pull system across the board.
The Just-in-time system relies on ordering supply “just in time” to meet a customer’s demand. For this kind of inventory management to be effective, it is dependent on open communication between suppliers, vendors, and third-party involvement. Otherwise, there’s a risk the customer’s needs can’t or won’t be met in a timely fashion.
Common Warehouse and Inventory Management Systems
Inventory Management Systems
Warehouse Management Systems
Warehouse Management vs. Inventory Management
As long as we’re talking about the two different processes, warehouse management vs. inventory management, here are some of the pros and cons of running one vs. the other.
These processes have large amounts of overlap, at least from the side of warehouse management. We defined them a bit above. Inventory management systems will solely focus on tracking a company’s stock, orders, and inventory going in and out every week. But a warehouse management system is going to also track employees and help employees complete tasks throughout the warehouse. But, warehouse management systems will often also offer the ability to do everything that an inventory management system does as well.
Inventory Management Best Practices
1. Prioritize Your Inventory
- A refers to high-value, low sales inventory. This inventory is almost always more expensive but will offer you the highest profit margin.
- B refers to mid-value, mid-sales inventory. This is all of the items that you’re regularly moving but aren’t your fastest or highest seller.
- C refers to a lower value, high sale inventory. These are smaller items that you’re always moving and rarely storing over long periods of time. These items have a lower profit margin but do often sell enough to make up for that.
2. Track Product Information
The next trick for managing an effective inventory is to keep detailed records of all items in your inventory at any given moment. The information in these inventory records should include:
- SKUs
- Barcode information
- Suppliers
- Origin Country
- Lot number
Having good KPIs (key performance indicators) throughout your inventory processes will help you know what’s working vs. what’s not. This will be easy to see, while in others, it might not be quite as easy. Set sales goals to know how much inventory you want to move and how fast you want to move it.
Inventory turnover should be a key part of your company’s performance. The best thing for your business will be having a minimal amount of money invested in inventory that isn’t regularly moving in and out of your warehouse.
3. Regularly Audit Your Inventory
4. Practice the 80/20 Inventory Rule
5. Develop a Consistent Approach for Receiving and Handling Stock
Another tip to help manage your inventory is to have a uniform process for handling stock. While this may seem obvious, it’s surprising how quickly discrepancies develop when employees have an individualized approach to receiving and handling stock.
At worst, it creates breaks in the supply chain and inventory levels that don’t balance when neither you nor other employees are certain what came in or where it went. That makes it vital that you develop a process that has everyone receiving stock the same way.
How you receive stock varies, but you want to ensure:
- Incoming stock is verified
- Stock is received and unpacked simultaneously
- Number of incoming goods tallied with order numbers
- Everything is accurately counted and stored
6. Track Sales
Tracking sales is another seemingly obvious trick that can help manage inventory. As you track sales, look for things like:
- Seasonal drop-offs/boosts in popularity
- Days when the stock sells more than others
- Items that invariably sell together
7. Develop a Warehouse Plan that Prioritizes Stock
8. Ensure Low-Stock Alerts are In Use and Maintain Reorder Quantities
09. Use Cloud-Based Software
10. Use Inventory Management Software
11. Monitor All Inventory Aspects and Levels
12. Order Your Own Restocks
15. Plan for the Future
Why Use an Effective Inventory Management System?
Now that you’re well underway to developing a more effective inventory management system, you may begin to wonder why it’s so important. A good inventory management system helps you:
- Track inventory levels
- Gauge what sells
- Reassess the importance of existing stock