Hi Chris,
Sorry it took so long to get back to you. First off, before I get going, let me tell you that the subject of 'LOST SALES' is open to so many different opinions that it could be debated in the Automotive "Supreme Court" (if we had one).
Second, I know very little about UCS (I apologize) just due to the fact that our friends in Houston make it difficult for someone in my position to dial into a dealers system to look at things. However, based on what you have said, I think that is totally crazy that they would do that.
In my opinion, the term lost sale is an open term. I probably have heard of at least 5 different interpetations of what a lost sale should be.
Do you post a lost sale because
a) you are out of the part (stock out)
b) you are out of the part (backorder)
c) you don't stock it at all
d) your price was too high
e) your wholesale customer canceled because you couldn't get it to them quick enough
f) you delivered the wrong part the first time
I am sure we could build a lot more than this, but you get the point. Here is a great way to look at what lost sales can do based on the liberal way we look at it today.
Dealer #1 needs a part he doesn't stock and the customer is down in the shop.
Dealer #1 calls 4 Dealers in his locality to try and find the part:
Dealer #2 is out and posts a lost sale
Dealer #3 is out and posts a lost sale
Dealer #4 doesn't even stock it, adds the part to his system and posts a lost sale.
Dealer #5 finally has it and sells it to Dealer #1.
Dealer #1 receipts it and sells it. The parts advisor posted a lost sale up front.
You now have 5 dealers who have post 4 lost sales and 2 sales for a single transaction of the part. And our manufacturers want to track our sales and estimate our inventory needs?
I am sure this will open some more conversation(it always does). To get to the point Chris, at least you know what your DMS is doing, so I would suggest that you set up multiple phase-in sources and make it just a bit harder for the parts to come in. With Ford we use the following criteria for phase-in
Part Numbers that start with F4 or less have a phase in of 4/10
Part Numbers that start with F5 to F7 have a phase in of 3/9
Part Numbers that start with F8 and greater have a phase in of 2/7.
While this is not perfect science with Ford part numbering logic, it does 75% of what we want it to do.
OK, I am ducking.... Fire away....
Chuck Hartle'