Effective Zero-Inventory-Ordering Policies for the Single-Warehouse Multiretailer Problem with Piecewise Linear Cost Structures
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We analyze the problem faced by companies that rely on TL (Truckload)
and LTL (Less than Truckload) carriers for the distribution of products across
their supply chain. Our goal is to design simple inventory policies and
transportation strategies to satisfy time varying demands over a finite
horizon, while minimizing system wide cost by taking advantage of quantity
discounts in the transportation cost structures. For this purpose, we study the
cost effectiveness of restricting the inventory policies to the class of
zero-inventory-ordering (ZIO) policies in a single-warehouse multiretailer scenario in which the warehouse serves as a
cross-dock facility. In particular, we demonstrate that there exists a ZIO
inventory policy whose total inventory and transportation cost is no more than
4/3 (5.6/4.6 if transportation costs are stationary) times the optimal cost.
However, finding the best ZIO policy is an NP-hard problem as well. Thus, we
propose two algorithms to find an effective ZIO policy: An exact algorithm
whose running time is polynomial for any fixed number of retailers, and a linear-programming-based
heuristic whose effectiveness is demonstrated in a series of computational experiments.
Finally, we extend the worst-case results developed in this paper to systems in
which the warehouse does hold inventory.