Features
Deferred COGS
Recognition
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Oracle Cost Management section of this
document. Revenue managers are increasingly insisting on complying with
International Accounting Standards (IAS- 18), which prescribes the accounting
treatment for revenue arising from certain types of transactions and events.
IAS18.14 in particular states that revenue arising from the sale of goods
should be recognized when all of the following criteria have been satisfied:
•
The seller has transferred to the buyer the significant risks and rewards of
ownership;
•
The seller retains neither continuing managerial involvement to the degree usually
associated with ownership nor effective control over the goods sold;
•
The amount of revenue can be measured reliably;
•
It is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will
flow to the seller; and
•
The costs incurred or to be incurred in respect of the transaction can be
measured reliably.
It
is critical, therefore, to de-couple the shipment of product and the
recognition of COGS. Revenue should be recognized only when customer accepts
the ownership of the goods.
With
this enhancement, you have the flexibility to model the de-coupling the
physical event of shipping goods from the recognition of COGS. Oracle Inventory
can now defer the recognition of cost of goods sold until all contract
contingencies have been fulfilled and revenue has been recognized in Oracle
Receivables. In this manner both COGS and revenue are recorded in the same
accounting period. This feature aids organizations where strict revenue
recognition policies are in place.
Depot Repair
Enhancements
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Depot Repair section of this document.
Different
applications use Inventory's "move order" capability to create,
update, allocate, and transact move orders. In certain business processes, it
is required to invoke the "transact move order" screen to complete
move orders and minimizing key strokes is key to a great user experience. With
this release, different applications can invoke "transact move order"
screen by passing the Inventory organization and Sales order information, and
the system will directly show the results of the search criteria by completely bypassing the 'find' screen and taking the
user to the 'detail' screen.
Genealogy
Enhancements
In
many industries – due to predominant outsourcing, complex manufacturing of assemblies
and regulatory requirements on product trace ability it may be necessary to identify
and build a genealogy for each end assembly. This genealogy links the final assembly
to the various Lot and/or serialized components manufactured or procured from suppliers,
so that rejects/product defects can be traced back to the root cause. This
trace ability can improve the handling customer complaints, streamline product
recalls, retrace the source of any quality problems, etc. In order to support
increased product composition visibility in Oracle Inventory, the lot and
serial genealogy inquiries have been consolidated. Users now have a combined
view of lot and serial genealogy in one inquiry. In addition, for Oracle
Discrete manufacturing users, operators performing the WIP issue transactions
can tie their component lot and/ or serial numbers with a parent assembly. If
this data is entered, a user in the genealogy form can see the direct genealogy
construct between the parent assembly lot and child component lots rather than
using the WIP job as the connection between the products. As an additional
failsafe measure, in order to preserve the integrity of the genealogy, Oracle
Inventory will ensure that only the lots that were issued to the work order can
be returned from the work order into inventory when performing a component
return for a lot controlled item. Through a new tab on the genealogy form,
users can now directly access Oracle Discrete or OPM Quality’s inspection
results. For complex genealogies (or those of significant transaction volume),
the same information available in the genealogy window is also available in a
report.
Asset Tracking
Transaction Attributes
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Asset Tracking section of this document. In
order to enable Oracle Asset Tracking users to better track assets that are
issued to or received from various field locations, users can now mandate entry
of the location field while defining transaction types in Oracle Inventory.
When users perform miscellaneous transactions for these transaction types, they
are required to specify a field location from/to where the asset is being
received or deployed.
Intercompany
Invoicing of CTO on Internal Orders
In
today’s business environment, customers are demanding products that are
tailored to their unique specifications. Successful companies must provide
customized versions of products, at any volume and ship them from/to anywhere
in the world. The Oracle Configure to Order Solution can also be leveraged for
customer orders as well as internal orders, thus enabling users to configure
products required for internal transfers. For customers using Oracle's
Configure to Order functionality on internal orders, Inventory's
Intercompany
invoicing can now determine the invoice price for an internal order based on
the model and the options chosen. This eliminates the need to pre-define the configuration
on a price list and can leverage Oracle Advanced Pricing's capabilities to determine
a more intelligent invoice price.
Ledger Architecture
Support
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Oracle Financials section of this document. In
order to support the new Ledger architecture in Oracle Financial Applications,
Oracle Inventory now limits the accounts identified with an Inventory
Organization, in the Organization Parameters form to be those accounts
associated with the legal entity to which the inventory organization is
assigned. An inventory organization still belongs to only one legal entity,
however the transactions performed in that organization may use distribution
accounts that are assigned to a different legal entity.
Legal Entity
Support
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Oracle Financials section of this document. In
today’s global economy, many multi-national corporations are pursuing shared
service center and single instance initiatives to combine and consolidate
business operations for multiple legal entities into one or fewer instances for
efficiency and economies of scale. Currently, many of these legal entity
attributes are defined at the operating unit, set of books, or some other level
which makes it challenging and cumbersome to effectively perform accounting and
reporting for an establishment (legal entity).With this Legal entity uptake,
Oracle Inventory provides a mechanism whereby all transactions and accounting
are based and validated from the new ledger–legal entity instantiated through the
accounting flow setup.
This
integrated approach facilitates further consolidation of data at an
establishment (legal entity) level and eases financial accounting and
reporting.
Material Workbench
Enhancements
Viewing
material in the facility is one of the most important tasks in a warehouse. Having
a quick and accurate picture of inventory levels across organizations can allow
warehouse managers to make informed decisions regarding the routing of
inventory supply and demand.
In
order to allow advanced viewing capabilities, the Material Workbench now lets a
user see material across organizations categorized into three
"buckets":
•
Inbound Intransit
•
Receiving
•
On-hand
Visibility
to Purchase Orders, Advanced Shipment Notices, and Internal Orders through one
form greatly increases the information available and facilitates better
decision making. In addition to the summary view, the Workbench allows the user
to drill down into each of the individual "buckets" to see detailed
information about all material represented. Availability information is
calculated according to the material location of relevant material for Inbound
Intransit, Receiving, and Onhand material. Finally, users can save their
queries and allow others to reuse common inquiries. These changes allow the
business to have better information related to their inventory levels that is
grouped in such a way as to maximize the ability to make effective decisions.
Multi Org Access
Control
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. For more
information, please refer to the Oracle Manufacturing section of this document.
In order to support the new operating unit access control flexibility within
the e-Business suite which allows a user to view data across a set of operating
units, Oracle Inventory now allows users to perform project issue and receipt
transactions for any project defined in the set of operating units to which the
user has access.
OPM Convergence
Over
40% of the world's manufacturing companies are process manufacturers. Companies
that produce metals, paper, chemicals and foods face unique challenges in inventory
and product quality and attribute tracking. Historically, customers in these industries
have leveraged the Inventory Management module of Oracle Process Manufacturing.
With this release, Oracle Inventory can now be used by customers of Oracle's
Process Manufacturing modules in addition to the users of Oracle Discrete Manufacturing,
Service, Logistics and all other applications modules. This integration provides
the Oracle Process Manufacturing user seamless integration with the rest of the
E-Business Suite. In order to support the needs of process manufacturing
organizations, several additional features have been added to Oracle Inventory
as described below (namely dual unit of measure control, advanced lot tracking,
enhanced picking rules and enhanced material allocation processing). These
features will be available for all users of Oracle Inventory, regardless of
their manufacturing orientation. Note, however that not all modules in the
e-Business Suite will support all of the features below (for example dual unit
of measure control). To determine if a new Oracle Inventory feature will be
supported by another Oracle application, please refer to that application’s
section of this document.
Dual Unit of
Measure Control
In
the meat, poultry, metals or chemicals industry, "catch weight" is a
term used to track inventory simultaneously in two different units of measure.
To run their businesses, these industries need to know both the number of
cases, bars or drums of product stored as well as the weight or potency of that
product. Prices are calculated based on the shipment weight of the product not
on the number of cases or units shipped. Oracle Inventory's Dual Unit of
Measure Control enables users to transact inventory in two unrelated units of
measure where the conversion between the measures vary from lot to lot or from
one transaction to the next. If an item is dual unit of measure control
enabled, during transactions, users will be prompted to enter the transaction
quantity in both units and will be able to query on-hand balances, availability
and reservations in both units for full supply chain visibility to all required
handling units of measure. Note that dual unit of measure control is available
in Oracle Inventory, Purchasing & Receiving and Order Management and
Shipping. To determine if other modules in the Oracle e-Business Suite support
this functionality, please refer to each product’s Release Content Document.
Material Status
Control
Quality
Control and product lifecycle issues may require that certain material,
although stored in a ready to use state in the warehouse or production
facility, may not be usable for certain applications. A lot that has not yet
passed inspection should not be shipped to
a
customer or consumed in production. A warehouse location that has been
discovered to have erroneous inventory balances should not be included in
available to promise calculations. The functionality previously only available
to Oracle Warehouse Management users that enable users to assign a material status
to the material in an inventory lot, serial, subinventory or locator and to use
that status to restrict transactions is now available to all Oracle Inventory
users. Those material statuses will dictate which transactions can be performed
on the lot, the serial or the material that is stored in the subinventory or
locator. In addition, Oracle's planning applications and Inventory's availability
calculations can now take the material status into consideration when determining
availability. Users can determine whether or not product of a particular status
can be reservable, included in ATP calculations or netted in production
planning. Using material status warehouse employees, materials managers,
production planners and customer service representatives will be provided with
a more granular and accurate picture of the inventory that is available for
them to use for each business purpose. Note that not all Oracle Applications
will support the material status restrictions. To determine if an individual
module in the e-Business Suite will support this functionality, please refer to
that product’s section of this document.
Advanced Lot
Control
Getting
fast answers to certain questions may determine whether your company will survive
a crisis. Questions such as'Which lots were delivered to which customers’? Which
other lots were produced from that production line during that shift? What was the
quality of the components or ingredients and which suppliers sent them?' To
enable better visibility to a lot, its genealogy and attributes, significant
enhancements have been made to the lot tracking capabilities within Oracle
Inventory. Sub-lot control allows users to track the parent lot from which
multiple lots were created. The parent lot may refer to the production batch
that spawned the lot but, if the output of that batch varied in term of grade
or other QC attributes, multiple sub-lots might be received into inventory.
Users can query lots in by their parent lot and view the parent lot in the lot
genealogy form.
Users
can also now grade control their lot controlled items. The product can be
queried by grade and the grade can be changed as required. Users can also track
retest dates, expiration and retest actions among other lot attributes. In
addition, a new concurrent request in Oracle Inventory can initiate a workflow
if a lot or serial approaches any key milestone dates such as expiration,
retest or best-by date. The genealogy form has also been enhanced to allow
users to view quality inspection results, material status and grade change
history and other information about the lot. These features and more will
provide materials managers with the tools they need to enable faster turn
around on quality, customer care and production issues.
Picking Rules
Enhancements
Providing
optimum customer service in an order fulfillment operation often requires that
a
warehouse or manufacturing facility be able to capture each customer’s
individual product quality or material characteristics preferences. For
example, a customer may require premium grade material while another, more
price sensitive client, may have no such restrictions. Some customers may
mandate a certain number of usable days left on product that is to be shipped
to them. To manage these customer restrictions, the Oracle inventory picking
rules engine has been enhanced to incorporate certain restrictions on allocation
logic in addition to the sort criteria for acceptable material. These
restrictions are available for both sales order and work order allocation
processes. With this functionality, a customer service representative can now
guarantee that unacceptable product will not be shipped to a customer based on
each customer’s individual product preferences.
Enhanced Manual
Material Allocations
Often,
in smaller warehouses or facilities, inventory managers or material pickers
enjoy the flexibility of selecting, for themselves, the inventory that should
be picked for a given customer, work order or material transfer. The material
picked should still honor customer restrictions but may not be the product that
the system would have selected first. This product may be physically more
accessible or more desirable for other reasons not visible to Oracle Inventory.
In order to better facilitate manual allocation processes, the transact move
order form can now present all allocation options to a user and allows the user
to choose the allocations that he or she wishes to commit. This ensures that
the allocations made honor the customer restrictions but still allows the
warehouse operator the flexibility to choose the material that is most
accessible for picking.
Material Aging
Workflow
A
significant aspect to any materials management business process that involves
product with a limited shelf life is the management of expired or near expired
material. In the simplest case, this product requires disposition and disposal.
In some product categories, rework or refurbishment could further extend the
usable life of the product. In all of these cases, however, the product must be
located, isolated and proactively managed.
In
order to better support these business processes, Oracle Inventory has
introduced a new material aging workflow. This workflow can be leveraged to
create work orders, send notifications to planners, update material status or
request a movement of expired product to a quarantine or inspection area. This
functionality is offered in a new con-current request in Oracle Inventory which
can search for any date attribute of a lot or serial (including flex fields)
and will initiate the workflow for the lot or serial if the date attribute is
within a user specified range around the current date. For example, the request
could initiate the workflow for all lots that will expire in the next 5 days.
Using this material aging functionality, materials managers can set up
proactive handling procedures for date sensitive material.
Support for
Indivisible Lots
In
many industries, a single lot of product cannot or should not be physically
broken into pieces for material movements. Examples might include lengths of
metal pipe, reams of paper or rolls of carpet. In some cases, it would not be
physically possible for a warehouse picker to break the product into two
pieces, as in the case of metal sheets, coils or bars, to meet the exact
customer order quantity. In other cases, color, potency or other attributes of
lots may vary slightly such that there would be a noticeable variation in product
and, hence, a warehouse might prefer to over or under ship on product rather
than breaking a lot into partial quantities and being forced to ship a remnant
with another order. In order to support items that fall into this profile,
Oracle Inventory has introduced the concept of lot indivisibility. This item
attribute will indicate to the system that, during reservations and allocation,
the system must allocate the entire lot quantity in a given location or none at
all. In order to meet this requirement, over and under allocation, within
tolerances, will be supported automatically at pick release for indivisible
lots. but Oracle Inventory will not suggest these splits during allocation and
any reservation created will have to specify the lot to be reserved and will
have to reserve the full lot quantity.
Enhanced Lot
Transactions
Companies
who leverage Oracle Shop Floor Manufacturing to manage their semiconductor or
other high technology assembly and fabrication processes have traditionally
used lot control tracking on their finished goods and components. Some may
choose to also serial control their finished goods. In order to support both
lot and serial controlled items in typical high tech business processes, Oracle
Inventory's lot split, merge and translate transactions can now be performed on
items that are both lot and serial controlled.
Organization
Parameter Changes
Additional
inventory organization attributes have been added to the Inventory Organization
Parameters form in order to enable new functionality in Oracle Inventory R12
Logistics Release Content Document, Rev. 00 Inventory Management 10 and Oracle
Warehouse Management. These new features include labor reporting, locator aliasing,
EPC compliance support for RFID tagging, chargeable subcontracting and best fit
quantity allocation. For more information on each of these features, please
refer to the respective feature descriptions in the Inventory and Warehouse
Management sections of this document.
Performance - Pick
Release Parallelization
Today,
the speed with which a system can release picks to the warehouse floor determines
the start time for the order fulfillment process. In high volume order fulfillment
operations, the ability to release orders as quickly as possible is of
paramount importance to warehouse managers. In order to further support high
volume facilities, pick release can now be run in a parallel or multi-threaded
manner. This enables each item or ship set in the released batch to be
allocated simultaneously so that the entire batch can complete in a more timely
manner without sacrificing Oracle's built in comprehensive management for pick
slip grouping and document printing, cartonization, ship set validation and
other adaptive order fulfillment features.
Enhanced
Reservations
In
certain business models, specific supply is secured for a given end customer
order. In these cases, availability can be guaranteed by creating reservations
against on hand inventory or the purchase order or work order that were created
to fulfill the customer order. Warehouse managers may want to use a specific
lot being built in manufacturing or an item expected on a purchase order for a
sales order or any other demand to ensure availability. This feature
facilitates planned cross docking in the warehouse and allows it to meet its cross
docking objectives by reserving the most appropriate inbound receipts for an
outbound shipment Oracle Inventory's
reservations model now supports reservations to expected supplies such as
purchase orders, internal requisitions, advanced shipment notices,
manufacturing jobs, and process manufacturing's batches. New demand sources,
such as parts for CMRO work orders and process manufacturing are also supported
for reservations. Users can create these reservations through Inventory forms
and public APIs. In addition, users can now reserve a specific serial number
and Oracle Inventory will ensure that the reserved serial is allocated at pick
release.
Copy Organization
Enhancements
The
Copy Inventory Organization feature is enhanced for performance, and now allows
users to copy the following entities:
•
Planning Parameters
•
Shipping Parameters
•
WIP Parameters
•
WIP Accounting Classes
Telco Recurring
Charges
Note:
This change is in support of a feature in another product. Please see the
associated RCD for more details.
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Good information
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