An Approach to Integrate Commonality and Product Family Design With Inventory Decisions

2019 ◽  
Vol 141 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shun Takai

Commonality, or the use of the same components among products in a product family, has been considered an effective approach to design a product family. By implementing commonality, a firm can reduce the number of distinct components, component inventory, and inventory cost. However, product design may change and product cost may increase due to using common components that may require different interface conditions and be more expensive than the initially considered components. While the benefits and challenges are well recognized, simultaneous optimization of commonality, product family design, and inventory decisions has not been comprehensively studied. In this paper, we present an approach to integrate commonality, product family design, and inventory decisions by incorporating inventory-related costs in the profit formula. In the proposed approach, (1) commonality matrix is defined to assign product demands to components and component costs to products, (2) continuous inventory review policy is used to calculate safety inventory, (3) joint ordering is implemented to calculate inventory-replenishment lot size and cycle inventory, and (4) cycle service level (CSL) and expected number of component shortage per replenishment cycle (ESC) are utilized to calculate inventory-understock costs. The design of three beverage containers is used as an illustrative example to demonstrate the proposed approach, and sensitivity analysis is performed to contrast commonality and product family design of the three beverage containers with and without incorporating inventory decisions.

Author(s):  
Shun Takai

Commonality or the use of the same components among products in a product family has been considered an effective approach to designing a product family; however, simultaneous optimization of commonality, product family design, and inventory decisions has not been comprehensively studied. In this paper, we propose a framework to simultaneously optimize commonality, product family design, and inventory decisions by incorporating inventory-related costs in the profit formula. Design of beverage containers is used as an illustrative example to demonstrate the proposed framework.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seung Ki Moon ◽  
Daniel A. McAdams

Companies that generate a variety of products and services are creating, and increasing research on, mass-customized products in order to satisfy customers’ specific needs. Currently, the majority of effort is focused on consumers who are without disabilities. The research presented here is motivated by the need to provide a basis of product design methods for users with some disability—often called universal design (UD). Product family design is a way to achieve cost-effective mass customization by allowing highly differentiated products serving distinct market segments to be developed from a common platform. By extending concepts from product family design and mass customization to universal design, we propose a method for developing and evaluating a universal product family within uncertain market environments. We will model design strategies for a universal product family as a market economy where product family platform configurations are generated through market segments based on a product platform and customers’ preferences. A coalitional game is employed to evaluate which design strategies provide more benefit when included in the platform based on the marginal profit contribution of each strategy. To demonstrate an implementation of the proposed method, we use a case study involving a family of light-duty trucks.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Adhi Putra Mahardika ◽  
Muhammad Nashir Ardiansyah ◽  
Efrata Denny S. Yunus

Spare parts is one of the production support components which plays an important role for the survival<br />of gas production in the gas processing facility owned by SKN JOB Pertamina Talisman Jambi Merang. The<br />high inventory level increased the high inventory cost for the industry which get the benefit from the efficiency<br />of processes and resources. This research involved consumable spare parts for Solar Turbine engine as much<br />as 25 SKUs with demand character patterned lumpy demand and Poisson distribution. The implementation<br />of policies using Periodic Review (R, s, S) with Power Approximation approach in the inventory system<br />capable to generate a lower total cost inventory by pressing the backorder volume, the booking volume and the<br />inventory levels in a balanced manner. Calculation of Periodic Review (R, s, S) with Power Approximation<br />approach resulted inventory parameter which was able to press the total cost of inventory at 8.54% lower and<br />increase the service level by 1.11%.


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nurike Oktavia ◽  
Henmaidi Henmaidi ◽  
Jonrinaldi Jonrinaldi

The most popular inventory model to determine production lot size is Economic Production Quantity (EPQ). It shows enterprise how to minimize total production cost by reducing inventory cost. But, three main parameters in EPQ which are demand, machine set up cost, and holding cost, are not suitable to solve issues nowadays. When an enterprise has two types of demand, continue and discrete demand, the basic EPQ would be no longer useful. Demand continues comes from a customer who wants their needs to be fulfilled every time per unit time, while the fulfillment of demand discrete is at a fixed interval of time. A literature review is done by writers to observe other formulation of EPQ model. As there is no other research can be found which adopt this topic, this study tries to develop EPQ model considering two types of demand simultaneously.


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