Fill rate: Difference between revisions
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'''Q'''- quantity of order or lot size | '''Q'''- quantity of order or [[lot size]] | ||
'''E(US)'''- expected units short per replenishment cycle | '''E(US)'''- expected units short per replenishment cycle |
Revision as of 05:24, 20 January 2023
Fill rate |
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See also |
Fill rate - probability that any given randomly selected demand will be immediately satiate from available inventory. It is described by following formula (L. Ling 2007, p. 187):
Where:
Q- quantity of order or lot size
E(US)- expected units short per replenishment cycle
Next to fill rate there is also one measure of item performance- backorder. It describes the number of unfilled demand at an exact period of time. Whenever it is unable to fill the demand, backorder is established. It lasts until reorder or reparation of failed item. These two measures are related but also different in important ways. Fill rate is concerned only with what happens at a time demand takes place. Backorder measures number of demands which have not been fulfilled in any part of time. It is important to appreciate differences between these two. If the stock level on an item is increased, fill rate will increase but backorder will decrease. It is possible to have a system with both low fill rise and background but reverse situation would never exist (C.C. Sherbrooke 2004, p. 25-27).
Inventory managers are into fill rate because it is easy to measure. They only need to take into consideration what happens at the time every demand takes place- was it filled or not. Furthermore, numerical value is important- 95% fill rate is acceptable in their application, lower values cause complaints of customers (C.C. Sherbrooke 2004, p. 28).
Item Fill Rate and Order Fill Rate
According to A. M. Beitler, P. A. Gupta and S.A. Ehap :
- Item fill rate is used to measure if buyer has a single item of each PO. It is a rare situation because usually buyer order multiple items to reduce transaction processing cost.
- In scenario above a more appropriate is order fill rate. It can be estimated by calculating the product of the item fill rates for all line items in particular order ( e.g. if the order has four lines items for four different items with an item fill rate of 80% for each, the order fill rate will be - 0.8*0.8*0.8*0.8= 40.96%)( 2006, p. 36).
References
- Autry Ch. W., Bell J. E., Hill A. V., Goldsby T. J. (2013) Managing the Global Supply Chain (Collection) FT Press, New Jersey
- Beitler A. M., Gupta P. A., Ehap S.A. (2006) Purchase Order Management Best Practices: Process, Technology, and Change Management J. Ross Publishing, Fort Lauderdale (USA)
- Gimeno A, Oliveira A. (2014) Executing the Supply Chain: Modeling Best-in-Class Processes and Performance Indicators FT Press, New Jersey
- Ling L. (2007) Supply chain management: concepts, techniques and practices enhancing the value through collaboration, World Scientific Pub Co Inc, Singapore
- Park I., Rim s. (2008) Order picking plan to maximize the order fill rate Department of Industrial Engineering, Ajou University, Suwon (Republic of Korea)
- Rollins M., Sandberg R. (2013) The Business of Android Apps Development: Making and Marketing Apps that Succeed Apress, New York
- Sherbrooke C.C. (2004) Optimal Inventory Modeling of Systems: Multi-Echelon Techniques Springer Science & Business Media, Boston
- Teunter R. (2009) Note on the fill rate of single-stage general periodic review inventory systems Department of Management Science, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster
Author: Dominika Kuraś