by PartsPlant81 » Thu Feb 26, 2015 4:56 pm
Lost Sales Process – cont.
In this situation we could continually, once a month receive a request for this same item, procure the item and our system would never try to phase in the part. The system does not know that we are selling this item because we charge it out as an in-out transaction.
The counter person must record the original equipment part number on either the vendor’s invoice or the attached purchase order. When he charges out the vendor part number on the repair order he must also post a lost sale to the original equipment part number on the system.
Was this transaction actually a lost sale? No, it was a demand sale, but this is the only effective process to capture our sales of outside vendor items that have an O.E. equivalent. Now after we procure the same item two or three times the system will try to phase in the part number.
This lost sale situation is very easily monitored because the part number was recorded on the vendor’s invoice and/or the purchase order. Every time that you review the outside payables you check the ones with an O.E. part number against your lost sales report to ensure that the counter people are recording the lost sale.
We can write a daily lost sales report in report generator, in ascending date sequence, to facilitate this process. With this format of a lost sale report we don’t have to look through the entire body of the report because yesterday’s transactions are the last items to print. This report can be put into the job scheduler to run daily to ensure that we have a copy when reviewing the outside payables.
With the above process we can capture lost sales and monitor the two major areas that generate lost sales. If a counter person is forgetting to record the lost sale you can identify it immediately because you have a copy of the outside payable that was involved. In addition, it is clear who the counter person was that forgot to post the lost sale. If a counter person does not print a price quote, in effect defeating that part of the process, it becomes obvious because that is now part of your price and availability process with the technicians.
Another problem area with lost sale posting is qualifying what is a lost sale! I see situations where counter people will not post a lost sale because they feel the part is too old or is a trim item. You can not have anyone qualifying lost sales, this is not a think process, if it is requested and not procured, post it! I don’t care what it fits or how old the vehicle is!
The worst case scenario is that the part will appear on a phase in report and you will delete it. This is not a situation where the part will automatically appear on your shelves.