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  2. Inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inventory

    While the reasons for holding stock were covered earlier, most manufacturing organizations usually divide their "goods for sale" inventory into: Raw materials: Materials and components scheduled for use in making a product. Work in process (WIP): Materials and components that have begun their transformation to finished goods. These are used in ...

  3. Work in process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Work_in_process

    Production costs includes all costs associated with manufacturing a product, such as raw materials, labor, and overhead costs. Finished goods is the total value of goods ready for sale in the current accounting period. The formula for calculating WIP inventory is as follows: beginning WIP inventory + production costs – finished goods. [11]

  4. Supply chain management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_chain_management

    Supply chain management is a cross-functional approach that includes managing the movement of raw materials into an organization, certain aspects of the internal processing of materials into finished goods, and the movement of finished goods out of the organization and toward the end consumer.

  5. Warehouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warehouse

    Warehouse in South Jersey, a U.S. East Coast epicenter for logistics and warehouse construction, [1] outside Philadelphia, where trucks deliver slabs of granite. A warehouse is a building for storing goods. [2] [3] Warehouses are used by manufacturers, importers, exporters, wholesalers, transport businesses, customs, etc.

  6. Distribution center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_center

    Sainsbury's distribution centre in Waltham Point, Hertfordshire, United Kingdom.. A distribution center for a set of products is a warehouse or other specialized building, often with refrigeration or air conditioning, which is stocked with products to be redistributed to retailers, to wholesalers, or directly to consumers.

  7. Logistics engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistics_engineering

    While logistics looks at single echelons with the immediate supply and distribution linked up, supply chain looks at multiple echelons/stages, right from procurement of the raw materials to the final distribution of finished goods up to the customer. It is based on the basic premise that the supply and distribution activities if integrated with ...

  8. Field inventory management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_inventory_management

    The stock size needs to correspond to the amount of products which are sold. If the stock is too large (especially with perishable goods as fruit, vegetables...) there is a risk of financial losses as some of the inventory may spoil while sitting in the store. To reduce this risk (and keep financial losses as small as possible), there is hence ...

  9. Supply chain operations reference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_chain_operations...

    Lastly, the distribution strategy chosen by the manufacturing company is to ship weekly finished goods to a distribution warehouse based in Central Europe. The description suggests that a weekly shipment is closer to a forecast-based rather than a just-in-time policy. A shipment is a delivery process, so we must look under the Deliver tree.