Purchasing-- Consigned and Vendor Managed Inventory

 VMI Consigned Inventory



Consigned and Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI)

Overview of Consigned Inventory

Consigned inventory from supplier exists when inventory is in the possession of one party (a dealer, agent, distributor, and so on), but remains the property of another party (such as the manufacturer or primary contractor) by mutual agreement. Consigned inventory from Supplier refers to one type of consigned inventory practice where you receive and maintain goods belonging to one or more of your suppliers. Both suppliers and customers benefit through a consigned inventory strategy:
  • Suppliers can compete on the basis of availability and delivery when finished goods are at the customer site, particularly when lead times are lengthy.
  • Holding material on consignment reduces the lead time for items that might be required to fill sales orders.
  • Customers experience increased inventory turns—thus, reducing funds invested in inventory. 
  • Financial resources are free until customer commitments are ensured, or items are used in production.

VMI Process Overview

The VMI supplier monitors the current level of inventory items through access into the customer system (such as Oracle iSupplier Portal or Oracle Collaborative Planning). The view of inventory is restricted to items for which the supplier has VMI planning responsibility. The supplier can see the balance of on hand stock, in-transit quantities, open requisitions and purchase orders, and other information, such as forecasts.

A request results in the creation of an approved purchase requisition. The buyer can manually assign these requisitions onto a blanket purchase order with the VMI supplier, or set up the system to have this process automated. The supplier ships upon approval of the blanket release. When the goods are delivered to your site, the receipts are recorded and the supplier tracks all stages through delivery into stock.

The customer inventory or plant employees use material at any time. When the goods are transferred or placed into production, the material becomes part of internally planned goods—and the supplier no longer has visibility to that portion of stock. If the new VMI on-hand quantity is below thresholds, the supplier manually or automatically requests new shipments on behalf of the customer.

Using Vendor Managed Inventory with Consigned Inventory

 Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) is a procurement and planning practice in which a company delegates key inventory management functions to its suppliers. Suppliers initiate a replenishment request based on current inventory levels and the customer forecasts. VMI benefits customers through greater service levels and reduced risk of stock-outs. A successful VMI program can provide trading partners with greater efficiency and lower cost, by eliminating the need for repetitive manual tasks involved in ordering commonly required items.

The table below lists the profile options that control Consigned Inventory and VMI

Consigned and VMI Profile Options :

Profile Option

Default

User
Access
System
Administrati
on: Site

System
Administrati
on:
Application

System
Administrati
on:
Responsibili
ty

System
Administrati
on: User
PO: Display VMI Warning,

Yes
No Access

Update
No Access

No Access

No Access

PO: Supplier Consigned
Enabled,
No
No Access

Update
No Access

No Access

No Access

PO: VMI Enabled,
No
No Access

Update
No Access

No Access

No Access


PO: Display VMI Warning
Yes or No indicates whether a warning will be displayed when Vendor Managed
Inventory (VMI) item is being placed on a Purchasing document. Default is Yes, the
warning will be displayed.

PO: Supplier Consigned Enabled
Yes or No indicates whether inventory consignment from supplier features are enabled
in Oracle Purchasing.

PO: VMI Enabled
Oracle Vendor Managed Inventory: Yes or No indicates whether Vendor Managed
Inventory (VMI) is enabled in Oracle Purchasing.


Topics Covered

Purchasing Concurrent program INVENTORY MODULE Inventory Concepts Min-Max Puchasing Sales Order Supply Chain Management Xml Publisher dff Alert Creation Assembly Pull Assigning Approval Groups Assigning Item BOM Tables Backend Tables Base Tables Bills of Material Tables CATALOG TABLES CATEGORY TABLES Closed not Summarized Concurrent Programs Concurrent Request Consigned and VM Inventory Count (*) Customer Items Customer Items Architecture DDL DML Defining Line Type Defining Subinventories Drop Ship EBS EVEN NUMBERED Error: - APP-PER-50022 FND Tables FRM-40735 Fetch Item Information Flexfields Functional GENERIC DISPOSITIONS Hosting ITEM LOCATIONS TABLE Idle Session Timeout Important questions Introduction to Database Invalid Identifier Error Inventory Inventory Implementation Inventory Item master Inventory Transaction Item Attributes Item Cross Reference Item Defining Attributes Item Deletion Item Master Item Relationships Item Status Attributes Item Tables Java Setup for R12 Key Tables Location Creation Lot and Serial Manufacturer Items Move order Normalization ODD NUMBERED ORA-29273 ORDER MANAGEMENT Oracle Apps Oracle Instance Oracle Order Management PURCHASING MODULE Payable Table Payment Terms Procure to Pay Cycle Profile Categories Purchase - PO Revisions Purchase - Purchase Document Types Purchase Order Purchasing - Define Buyers Purchasing - Defining Approval Groups Purchasing - Invoice matching Purchasing Options Quotations Quote Analysis RFQ RICE Components Receipt Routings Receivables (AR) Tables Receiving Options Registration of a Report Requisition Templates Responsibility Query SALES ORDER TABLE SALES PERSON CREATION SCM Service Contract Sql Self Joins Subinventory Subinventory Transfer Supplier Lists Suppliers TEMP Tablespace Toad Value Sets Wildcard Workflow copy column find an PO details implementation inbound order to cash org_id out bound out of the box implementation vanilla implementation