Management of Ebony, a leading manufacturer of bath soap, is trying to control its inventory costs. The weekly cost of holding one unit of soap in inventory is $30 (one unit is 1000 cases of soap). The marketing department estimates that weekly demand averages 120 units, with a standard deviation of 15 units, and is reasonably well modeled by a normal distribution. If demand exceeds the amount of soap on hand, those sales are lost; that is, there is no backlogging of demand. The production department can produce at one of three levels: 110, 120, or 130 units per week. The cost of changing production from one week to the next is $3000.
Management would like to evaluate the following production policy. If the current inventory is less than L = 30 units, then produce 130 units in the next week. If the current inventory is greater than U =80 units, then produce 110 units in the next week. Otherwise, continue at the previous week’s production level.
Ebony currently has 60 units of inventory on hand. Last week’s production level was 120.
Questions
1. Create a spreadsheet to simulate 52 weeks of operation at Ebony. Graph the inventory of soap over time. What is the total cost (inventory cost plus production change cost) for the 52 weeks?
2. Use a simulation of 500 iterations to estimate the average 52-week cost with values of U ranging from 30 to 80 in increments of 10. Keep L= 30 for every trial.
3. Calculate the sample mean and standard deviation of the 52-week cost under each policy. Graph the average 52-week cost versus U. What is the best value of U for L= 30?
4. What other production policies might be useful to investigate? 5. There is a lost sales aspect to this case that hasn’t been included, at least not explicitly, in the questions. How could you include it explicitly in the analysis?