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On the Number of Customer Classes in a Single-Period Inventory System

Journal
Mathematics
ISSN
2227-7390
Date Issued
2024-05-01
Author(s)
López-Campos, Mónica
Departamento de Industrias  
Escalona, Pablo
Departamento de Industrias  
Angulo, Alejandro
Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica  
Recabarren, Francisca
Departamento de Industrias  
Stegmaier Bravo, Raul Enrique  
Departamento de Industrias  
DOI
10.3390/math12101509
Abstract
<jats:p>A common practice in inventory systems with several customers requiring differentiated service levels is to group them into two or three classes, where a customer class is a group of customers with the same preset service level in terms of product availability. However, there is no evidence that grouping customers into two or three classes is optimal in terms of the ordering policy parameters. This paper studies the effect of the number of customer classes on the inventory level of a single-period inventory system with stochastic demand and individual service-level requirements from multiple customer classes. Using a Sample Average Approximation approach, we formulate computationally tractable multi-class service level models, under responsive and anticipative priority policies in cases of shortage, as mixed integer linear problems (MIPs). The effect of the number of classes on the inventory level is determined using a round-up aggregation scheme; i.e., given a sufficiently large initial number of classes, it is reduced by adding the lower service level classes to the next higher class. We analytically characterize the optimal inventory level under responsive and anticipative priority policies as a function of the initial number of classes and the number of classes grouped based on the round-up aggregation scheme. Under a responsive priority policy, we show that there is an optimal number of classes, while under an anticipative priority policy, the optimal number of classes is equal to the initial number of classes. The effect of free-riders resulting from the round-up aggregation scheme on the optimal inventory level is studied through numerical experiments.</jats:p>
Subjects

inventory

shortage

service level

customer classes

priority policy

round-up aggregation

Sample Average Approx...

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