INVENTORY PLANNING & OPTIMIZATION
Working Capital
Optimization: Increase Cash
Flow in the New Economy
Different products have different costs and lead times.
For example, a customer who
requires a custom part from a
manufacturer (build to order)
will have different service
requirements than a customer
who sells a commodity (build
to stock) part. Thus segmentation of the customers based
on their inventory management requirements is necessary. Best-in-Class companies
are 1.5 times more likely than
all others to be leveraging a
statistical method for computing inventory targets.
Seasonal industries can see
large swings in demand as
well as lead-time variability
across demand peaks and
lows driven by seasonality.
Construction equipment companies are examples of companies that have long-term
seasonality and the apparel
industry involves short-term
seasonality.
nventory optimization is a highly tangible approach to improve the
cash flow of companies. These companies should implement a process
that understands demand and lead-time variability across the supply
chain and assigns policy at each SKU location. This will globally optimize
I
inventory policies across supply chain tiers, accounting for both demand and
supply variability using a stochastic (probabilistic) approach versus a rules-based or deterministic approach that does not fully account for variability.
The reduction in working capital that results in the release of cash can be utilized in several ways. It can be used to pay back debts that companies may have
incurred. It can be used to pay interest for notes that companies may have
taken. It can also be used for paying dividends to shareholders. However, the
most important approach that organizations should take is to invest this
unlocked cash flow into growth or profitability initiatives. This is the approach
known as leverage in the financial community, namely creating a multiplier in
terms of value creation. Supply chain, procurement and manufacturing professionals have a great tool in the form of working capital optimization to create
true economic value for their company's shareholders.
The Outlook
The 2008 survey data on working capital optimization (WCO) showed that for
65 percent of respondents WCO was a high priority at the time. In 2010, 83 percent saw WCO as a high priority. The top driver compelling companies to focus
on WCO in 2008 and in 2010 was the pressure by financial stakeholders to
improve working capital metrics (reported by 66 percent in 2008 and 60 percent in 2010). In 2010, however, the shortage of working capital to support
basic operations was the number two pressure compared to inventory- and
business-expansion-related pressures that were predominant in 2008. This
—Nari Viswanathan, vice president &
trend is expected to continue in 2011 with working capital optimization remain-
principal analyst at Aberdeen Group
ing a top priority for CFOs and chief supply chain officers alike.