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Course 12
Supply Chain · Inventory · Flow

Demand-Driven Inventory Management

Kanban, DDMRP & Flow Control for Industrial Operations — reduce stock-outs, cut excess inventory and improve operational stability through visual systems and demand-driven replenishment.

12–18 hours Theory + Practical Application Blended or on-site
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Demand-Driven Inventory Management — Kanban and DDMRP visual systems

Why this course matters

Many industrial companies live with the same paradox: too much inventory in some materials and critical stock-outs in others. The result is a reactive operation — constant urgencies, expedited purchases, production stoppages, excess working capital and conflicts between production, planning, supply chain and procurement.

This course helps participants understand and apply practical demand-driven inventory management — combining Kanban, DDMRP and visual flow control to create systems that are more stable, flexible and aligned with operational reality.

The core problem
Traditional MRP and forecast-based systems assume a stable, predictable world. Industrial operations rarely are. When demand varies, lead times fluctuate and internal reliability is inconsistent, the result is always the same: wrong inventory, in the wrong place, at the wrong time.

Pain points this course helps resolve

Who this course is for

Designed for professionals who need to transform inventory management into a more visual, collaborative and demand-driven system.

What you will learn

The DDMRP buffer zones

One of the most powerful elements of DDMRP is the visual buffer logic — a simple red/amber/green system that makes inventory decisions intuitive for any operator or planner.

Red Zone — Replenish now
Stock below safety threshold. Replenishment required immediately.
Amber Zone — Monitor closely
Stock in normal operating range. Plan replenishment.
Green Zone — Adequate
Stock at desired level. No replenishment needed.

Course structure

Module 1
Foundations of Inventory Flow
  • Inventory as a protection against variability
  • Flow, stock and availability — the real relationship
  • Impact on cash flow, service level and efficiency
  • Why MRP alone is not enough
Module 2
Kanban Fundamentals
  • What Kanban is and when to apply it
  • Pull vs push systems
  • Kanban cards, supermarkets and visual replenishment
  • Basic Kanban sizing and common errors
Module 3
Introduction to DDMRP
  • What DDMRP is and why it works
  • MRP vs Kanban vs DDMRP
  • Dynamic buffers concept
  • Red, amber and green zones
Module 4
Buffer Positioning & Segmentation
  • Identifying strategic materials
  • Criticality, lead time, variability
  • SKU classification and buffer placement
  • Avoiding over-protection
Module 5
Flow Control & Daily Management
  • Visual inventory dashboards
  • Daily and weekly review routines
  • Integrating alerts into operations meetings
  • Connection with Tier Meetings
Module 6
Practical Application
  • Select a critical material family
  • Diagnose current replenishment model
  • Identify gaps and causes
  • Design a pilot proposal

Duration and format

ComponentDuration
Theory / Conceptual Learning6–8 hours
Practical Application6–10 hours
Reflection & Gap AssessmentIncluded in modules
Practical AssignmentFinal deliverable
Total Recommended Duration12–18 hours

Format: Short practical course — theory, practical exercises, structured reflection and application in real or simulated context. Available blended or on-site.

Practical deliverables

Expected outcomes

Greater visibility over inventory risk and critical material availability
Reduced stock-outs in critical materials without increasing overall inventory
Lower dependency on urgencies and expedited orders
Better alignment between operations, procurement and supply chain
Reduced excess in low-turnover materials
Greater production flow stability
Faster, data-driven decisions
A practical Kanban or DDMRP pilot ready to implement

How this course connects with Operational Excellence

Demand-driven inventory management is directly linked to operational excellence. Without materials available at the right time, production stops. With excess inventory, cash flow suffers. This course connects inventory management with:

Visual Daily Management
Inventory alerts in Tier meetings
Systems Thinking
Flow management across functions
TPM
Equipment reliability affects buffers
Problem Solving
Root cause analysis of stock-outs
Hoshin Kanri
Linked to strategic priorities
Digital Operations
Data-driven replenishment
Waste Reduction
Excess inventory as waste
OpEx Certification
Complements the 12-month programme

Reflection Questions

At the end of the course, participants compare their current reality with the principles learned, identify gaps and define a concrete change plan.

Current state
How does your company manage inventory today — by forecast, MRP, Kanban or daily reaction?
Main problems
What are the biggest current problems: stock-outs, excess, urgencies or lack of visibility?
Critical materials
Which materials cause the greatest impact when they run out? Where is the highest variability?
Decision quality
Which decisions are data-driven and which still rely on opinions or urgencies?
Gap & opportunity
Which materials should have strategic buffers? What change can be implemented in 30 days?
Sustainability
What visual or digital routine would help sustain the improvement over time?

Ready to turn inventory into flow?

If your company lives between critical stock-outs and excess inventory, this course helps your team build a more visual, stable and demand-driven system.

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