Inventory optimization sits at the heart of effective supply chain planning, but it’s never been more challenging. Constant disruptions and uncertainties place increasing pressure on organizations to rethink how they manage inventory. To stay resilient, companies must move beyond reactive approaches and adopt smarter, more strategic methods that balance cost, service, and risk.
Here are three common inventory mistakes, and how to fix them:
- Relying on outdated tools. Many teams still rely on spreadsheets or ERP systems to manage inventory. While familiar, these tools aren’t designed for today’s complex supply chains. Modern planning requires advanced capabilities to evaluate trade-offs, manage risk, and support confident decision-making.
- Viewing inventory only as a cost. Treating inventory purely as an expense limits its potential. In reality, inventory plays a critical role in ensuring supply reliability, improving customer service, and creating a competitive advantage.
- Focusing only on short-term fixes. Fire-fighting tactics like cutting suppliers or increasing safety stock may solve immediate problems but can also reduce long-term flexibility. Strategic inventory positioning supported by forward-looking insights is essential for sustainable success.
With advanced inventory planning software like the AI-powered Atlas Planning Platform, organizations can simulate scenarios, evaluate trade-offs, and understand the end-to-end impact of inventory decisions using a digital supply chain twin. This enables smarter, faster, and more resilient planning, helping you move beyond reactive decision-making and truly optimize your inventory strategy.
- Full Transcript
Supplier and manufacturing constraints, demand fluctuations, geopolitical uncertainty… There are a lot of factors creating pressure on your inventory strategy. What steps should you take to help strengthen your inventory strategy to create a more resilient organization in the midst of a sea of challenges?
Let’s take a look at three common issues we see companies face.
First: How are you managing your inventory? Chances are it’s spreadsheets or your ERP system.
You’re not alone. Many companies turn to their ERP system and spreadsheets to manage inventory. Often these are the tools at your disposal and your team is familiar with them. However, these tools weren’t built for supply chain, much less for today’s highly complex supply chains. To drive value from your inventory, you need the ability to balance risk, ensure reliability, and drive confidence in your decisions.
Second: Inventory is often seen as just a cost to the business. It’s time to break that perception.
Many immediately see inventory as an expense. The reality is that inventory can be so much more, inventory ensures supply reliability, it impacts customer service, is a competitive differentiator, and yes, inventory has a cost.
To move beyond a sole focus on cost, the right tools can help you evaluate, for example, cost-to-serve tradeoffs so you can meet demand without unnecessary cuts, balancing service levels with cost while meeting your company’s objectives. Inventory is a powerful lever at your disposal to support the business.
Third: Stop thinking short term where you end up fire-fighting a lot.
Short-term fixes, like cutting suppliers to meet a quick need to decrease costs or increasing safety stock to solve a customer service challenge, can hurt flexibility. While we need to operate in the now, it is important to simultaneously think of the future. Strategic inventory positioning helps you optimize for long-term success.
The ability to understand and assess the impact of inventory decisions across the end-to-end supply chain is critical to long-term strategic planning.
For example, the AI powered Atlas Planning Platform can run simulations to understand and map out the impact of these decisions in a digital twin to help you decide the best course of action to take.