How the System Calculates Order Points

A product's order point indicates the minimum amount of stock you want to have on the shelf for a given item. When an item's projected inventory level (PIL) falls below its order point, the Suggested P/O program suggests that you purchase enough stock to bring all items in the buy line to their adjusted line points. That is, the line point adjusted up or down to meet the vendor target.

The Suggested P/O report can include products that were not below their order points.

A product's order point is the sum of the lead time days plus order point safety days, multiplied by the average demand for the item per day. If you define manual safety stock, the system adds this stock as a last step in determining the item's order point.

Note: If a minimum amount of quantity to stock is set on the User Inventory Controls window and the setting has not expired, then that amount overrides the line point calculation. You can set a minimum-only order point for a product to make sure the system uses the largest line point available.

Components of the Order Point

Parent/Baby Branches

When calculating the order point for a baby branch in a parent/baby relationship, the lead time for the baby branch is the greater of the lead time of the parent branch or the transfer cycle from the parent branch to the baby branch. This method protects the baby branch from running out of material during the transfer cycle.

See Also:

Adding Customer Service Stock

How the System Calculates Lead Time

How the System Calculates Line Point Safety Days

How the System Calculates Line Points