Manufacturing professionals: Are you buying parts and other raw material inventory for your factory just to have it sit for weeks or months prior to consumption?
By holding this inventory on your books, you’re doling out money for assets that won’t turn into cash any time soon. You’re also wasting valuable plant space for inventory when it could be used for production.
To avoid these shortcomings, you can work with your suppliers to institute a vendor managed inventory (VMI) model.
3PLs routinely help to facilitate these arrangements – storing the materials on behalf of the supplier and then performing final delivery. The 3PL gives the supplier secure visibility to its warehouse management system (WMS) to manage min/max levels.
VMI is of substantial benefit to your operation as you only pay for – and take physical ownership of – materials when they are needed.
Some smaller manufacturers hesitate to adopt a VMI strategy for fear of alienating suppliers, who may perceive the move as simply pushing costs back upstream in the supply chain. But VMI can be beneficial to suppliers as well. Think about it. Suppliers carry this inventory somewhere, often at a cost greater than they would incur at a 3PL warehouse near your factory. Also, suppliers can position inventory closer to you and reduce transportation costs.
A VMI strategy is one component of an overall inbound logistics approach to manufacturing operations. Other key inbound components include the following.
Third-party procurement. Right now, your buyers probably spend a good percentage of their time negotiating with, and procuring goods from, makers of boxes, nuts, bolts, and other consumable parts and materials. While necessary, these activities do little to improve factory output.
In addition to storing and delivering inventory with VMI and JIT capabilities, your 3PL can procure the materials that you require for manufacturing. As your 3PL may be purchasing for multiple customers, you can achieve economies of scale that you wouldn’t otherwise have on your own.
You can also free up your buyers to work on more important, larger contracts.
Kitting services. For many manufacturers, pre-assembly of component parts is also required during the production process. This assembly can take up a lot of time (as well as inventory space and manpower). To save a good chunk of this time – and, with it, a good chunk of money – many manufacturers utilize 3PL kitting services.
Kitting, as performed by a 3PL, is the act of taking the individual parts of a product, compiling them together in a “kit,” and then delivering that kit to the production operation for assembly.
For manufacturers in the mid-Atlantic region, Kanban can help enable a VMI model and support your manufacturing logistics needs by:
To learn more about Kanban’s manufacturing logistics services, contact us today.