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Inventory Procedures Find Capital in Your Business
What Would You Do with $1,000,000?
With $1 Million would you:
- Pay off debt?
- Purchase new equipment?
- Invest/save for the future?
- Give yourself a bonus?
- Buy a new car, boat or plane?
$1 Million Waiting in Your Wings
What do you and your business need that you have been putting off because you don’t have the money today? $1,000,000 certainly would fill those needs. But where do you find $1 Million just lying around your business right now? Well, you probably have $250,000 in each of four areas in your everyday business, and you don’t even realize it.
Money in Your Business Procedures
So let’s look at four places in your business where we will find $250,000 each and see how we can help you find it:
- Part 1: Inventory – $250,000.00
- Part 2: Accounts Receivable – $250,000.00
- Part 3: Sales – $250,000.00
- Part 4: Accounts Payable – $250,000.00
- Part 5: How-to Procedures – $1,000,000.00
Turn Time into Cash with a New Company Policy
But just what exactly is this source for cash? It’s time. If you are looking for $250,000 then it costs you $4,808 every week that you delay. So what you do with your time quite literally amounts to either costs of delaying, or it can amount to savings when you take action and control of your time. To correct this cost of delay, an increase in velocity must follow – which will set the difference between ‘good’ and ‘great’. The consequences of this shift in system velocity increases discipline and competency: the ability to maintain the increased velocity and the ability to make the adjustments to achieve the ‘great’. So how do you realize the difference?
Eliminate Inventory and Increase Cash
Let’s start with the biggest, most obvious source – your balance sheet, specifically inventory. If you are a manufacturer with $300,000 or more of inventory (raw materials, work in process or finished goods) then STOP! We found it. Why? Because inventory is an unproductive asset. Inventory is money, and having it lying around your factory is not where your money belongs. So if we reduce inventory to Just-In-Time (JIT) levels, then we can eliminate 85% or more of your inventory, which translates into $250,000 in cash. But that’s not all. You will also save another $50,000 or more in annual inventory carrying costs. With less inventory, there are lower costs of holding inventory. Let’s look at an example of what we’re talking about.
Manufacturing Business Procedures Case Study
A manufacturing organization with $2 Million in average inventory balances needed assistance. We examined their inventory consisting of raw materials, work in process and finished goods to understand and quantify the workflow, workload, and demand forecasting issues. Then we designed and implemented a process to improve their inventory cycle and tie it closer to their actual sales.
The metrics we developed reduced their inventories by 85% and increased their manufacturing cycle efficiency from 60% to 90% within 120 days of implementing the new procedures. With these new processes and reports, the company now tracks manufacturing cycle efficiency and delivery time variance rather than just units produced, as the measure of their manufacturing effectiveness. The result: extra capital plus a 50% increase in process capability (capacity).
Methods to Design the New Process
By becoming more efficient in the process, we can use time not as a detriment but as a significant benefit to our business. Step by step, let’s take a further look at how time and efficiency plays a great role in your business.
Increase Demand Forecasting Accuracy. We only need enough inventory to satisfy demand, and that is where part of the problem exists. If demand can not be accurately forecasted, then we end up compensating for this unknown with inventory.
Increase Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency. How well manufacturing resources are used to produce a product determines the cycle efficiency. Defective product, product rework, and long lags between manufacturing cells cause inefficiency, which can be easily calculated. Raw materials should be converted into finished goods as quickly as possible. The speed at which this occurs defines your manufacturing cycle efficiency.
Increase Supply Chain Turns. Increasing the number of times purchases are made may increase acquisition costs and unit costs because of smaller order quantities. But you will benefit by increasing your cash flow and eliminating the carrying cost of the inventory (warehousing, material handling, taxes, insurance, depreciation, interest and obsolescence totaling 25% to 35%).
Eliminate safety stock. Safety stock is really just a buffer for forecasting variance and supplier delivery time. While many levels are set arbitrarily in automated MRP systems, your safety stock levels will need to be reduced due to improvements in demand forecasting accuracy, manufacturing cycle efficiency and supply chain turns.
Reduce purchasing errors. This can reduce overstocking and, more importantly, minimize stock outs that result in expensive expedited purchases. Sell excess and obsolete inventory or return it to your vendor.
Eliminate delivery variance. Do not allow vendors to deliver early or late and make sure the delivered quantity does not vary from the order quantity. After all, delivery errors cause the need to carry more inventory. Instead, provide suppliers with forecasts of future needs.
Train purchasing personnel. Provide your purchasing and material management personnel with formal training. This will arm them with better negotiating skills that will result in better prices and terms.
Procedures Provide Time Savings
So, as we have seen, we should use each element of the process to extract the most benefit from our business. With time-saving procedures set in place, you will let your efficiency work for you.
Time Savings Provide Cash in the Bank
With well-defined processes and procedures in place, you will increase efficiency by increasing inventory turns. And of course an increase in inventory turns means an increase in cash on hand. It’s there – all you have to do is grab it.
Next part of this series, we will look at finding $250,000 in Accounts Receivable – another step as we work toward our goal of $1 million in cash savings. So not only aim to reap the rewards of extra savings to your bottom line, but also see more cash in the bank – $1,000,000 to be exact..
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June 13th, 2007 at 12:15 am
Thanks for this information you sent to me. In fact i must confess that at first I used to see it as if it’s one of the junk mails received, but this is one interesting thing. I can tell you write now I am using the same information to draft some of the internal controls for the small organisation I work with for which i am in charge of overseeing their finances. I found it handy because it clearly shows and addresses the dynamics of how things work now days.
Keep it up!
Lastly I happened to send it to one of my friends who is now moving around with copies of this. it has become one of his belongings as he moves around.
Bravo.
Kind regards ans waiting to hear from you very soon.
August 5th, 2007 at 7:18 am
HELP! Inventory question r/t COSGS. I filed an extension for my 2006 taxes because I started a sole proprietorship on Oct 24 2006 and needed time to organize my files. I am now getting ready to file. In preparation, I realized that I am not quite sure how to account for the retail inventory I have.
My question is on Schedule C “opening inventory” since this is my first year it would be “0″ correct? I would then add my cost of products for sale under purchases, list gross receipts and ending inventory to get COGS?
It may seem straight forward to an experienced person but I am not sure what amount to put in opening inventory – 0 or my cost since this is my first year.
Thanks! Kim Lacy
November 13th, 2007 at 3:23 am
Thanks for this information. I am struggling with my inventory accounts and your article will help me a lot to eliminate inventory and increase cash. My question is this: I am dealing with a Higher Learning institution finances and we are still building staff homes, students residences, classrooms etc. This allows us to handle a big inventory. How can we reduce our stocks and increase cash while we are far from town about 45 km. Please help me find a way of getting new procedures.
Masika Wasukundi
January 10th, 2008 at 2:56 am
Thanks a bunch for the information. With the limited space, your JIT approach would be of great help however, my company has realized that its through high inventory that it would solve the short term problem of ever increasing prices(currently hitting my country). Do you think this approach will help this company anyway?
May 20th, 2009 at 1:24 pm
[...] first speed and flow metric for most is inventory turns, which is a composite measure of your purchasing, manufacturing, and sales/marketing cycles. [...]
March 29th, 2010 at 9:59 am
thanks a lot but can u help explain about my Question is WHAT ARE THE KEY STRATEGIES WITH RESPECT TO ACCOUNT PAYABLE,INVENTORY AND ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLES FOR THE FIRM TO MANAGE ITS CASH EFFICIENTLY? PLEASE I NEED HELP
April 13th, 2010 at 11:42 pm
This article series address just that — inventory. The next articles in the series address accounts payable and accounts receivable. Follow the article chain and you will have your answers on what the key strategies are to manage your cash efficiently.