JD
Edwards Inventory Management
The JD Edwards Inventory Management module is the
"clearinghouse" for all inventory items in the system. It handles
receipts of items from inbound purchase orders or work orders and provides a
real-time view of items available for sale.
The main features of the Inventory Management system include:
The main features of the Inventory Management system include:
·
Stock and Non-stock Item Management
·
Item Costs and Prices
·
Lot Processing and Serial Number Tracking
·
Inventory Transaction Processing
·
Tag Counts and Cycle Counts
·
Kit Processing
Stock and Non-stock Item
Management
The Inventory Management system provides the ability to set up
and manage both Stock and Non-stock Stock Keeping Units (SKUs). Stock Items are
those for which you maintain inventory balances, typically for manufacture of
finished goods and/or sales to customers.
Non-Stock items are those for which you want to track all item information,
e.g., descriptions, prices, units of measure, etc. just as you would for an
inventory item. However, you can elect not to carry these items in stock.
Instead, you can sell them to be shipped directly from your supplier to the end
customer. This is commonly referred to as a "drop-ship" or
"direct-ship" order.
Item Costs and Prices
Inventory Management allows you to set up and maintain a
virtually unlimited number of different cost methods for your items. JD Edwards
provides standard functionality for a number of Cost Methods, including
Last-In, Weighted Average, Standard Cost and Base Purchase Cost to name a few.
You can also set up "user defined" costs for historical tracking,
price mark-ups or any other purpose specific to your company or industry.
Additionally, the Inventory Management system includes the ability to record item prices to sales orders, using a variety of mark-up and discount rules. To help you manage pricing more efficiently, you can also define groups of like items or customers where the same pricing treatment can be applied. Need even more pricing power? Check out JD Edwards' Advanced Pricing Module, which is one of the most powerful and flexible pricing systems available in any ERP software system.
Additionally, the Inventory Management system includes the ability to record item prices to sales orders, using a variety of mark-up and discount rules. To help you manage pricing more efficiently, you can also define groups of like items or customers where the same pricing treatment can be applied. Need even more pricing power? Check out JD Edwards' Advanced Pricing Module, which is one of the most powerful and flexible pricing systems available in any ERP software system.
Lot Processing and Serial
Number Tracking
Lot Processing is used to track groups of items having the same
SKU but may vary slightly in content or quality; perhaps because of individual
manufacturing runs. Another use of Lot Processing is for groups of different
component SKUs that are collectively used to manufacture a finished good.
Serial Number Tracking lets you maintain individual identities (serial numbers)
for individual items sold from inventory, with full "trace/track"
visibility all the way from your vendor to your end customer.
Inventory Transaction
Processing
Items commonly move through inventory via purchase order, work
order or sales order transactions. When none of these apply, the system
provides several options:
·
Adjustments - A
simple write-up or write-down of on-hand quantity, typically due to loss,
damage or to update an incorrect count.
·
Issues -
Items can be issued from inventory to any cost center in the organization,
either through pre-defined AAIs (Automatic Accounting Instructions) or direct
entry of the G/L Account Number to which the item should be charged.
·
Transfers -
If you don't need a purchase order or sales order, an Inventory Transfer lets
you quickly transfer items between warehouses or between different locations in
the same warehouse.
·
Reclassifications -
As the name implies you can "reclassify" an item from one part number
to another. One example is to account for an item that has been re-packaged
from one container size to another where the different container sizes have
different associated SKUs.
Tag Counts and Cycle Counts
Tag Counts allow you to select a specific warehouse location and
enter a count for every item in that location. Tag Counts are often done on a
rotating schedule for groups of items to ensure that the physical and system
on-hand quantities are in balance.
Cycle Counts are for a full physical "wall to wall" inventory. These are often done for audits or in conjunction with fiscal period closes.
Both count methods provide real-time quantity updates, transaction ledger visibility and general ledger updates to account for any variances.
Cycle Counts are for a full physical "wall to wall" inventory. These are often done for audits or in conjunction with fiscal period closes.
Both count methods provide real-time quantity updates, transaction ledger visibility and general ledger updates to account for any variances.
Kit Processing
You can use Kit Processing to define a parent item and one or
more associated components. These do not have to be manufactured items; they
may just be a group of related SKUs that are sold in various configurations.
Kits provide this flexibility without having to maintain every possible
configuration in your warehouse! (Translation: Your Inventory Manager will love
you!) Of course, you can vary the costs and prices of the different
configurations.
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