4.7 Article

Cross docking for libraries with a depot

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OPERATIONAL RESEARCH
Volume 290, Issue 2, Pages 749-765

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejor.2020.08.034

Keywords

Inventory control; Dynamic programming; Heuristics; Libraries; Rentals

Funding

  1. Dinalog, the Dutch Institute for Advanced Logistics

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Library organizations in the Netherlands are increasingly interested in using low-cost depots for storage and demand fulfillment. Two preferred methods for fulfilling requests are compared - cross docking and delayed shipments. The study derives optimal policies for different systems and reveals insights on the effectiveness of these methods in various situations.
Library organizations in the Netherlands show an increasing interest to employ depots for low-cost storage and demand fulfillment of item requests. Typically, all libraries in an organization have a shared catalog, and, on local unavailability, requests can be shipped from elsewhere in the organization. The depot can be used to consolidate shipment requests by making tours along all libraries, delivering requested items, but also picking up items that have to be stored at the depot, or that have to be shipped from one library to another. Cross docking and delayed shipments are two preferred methods for fulfilling requests that cannot be directly met using on-hand stock at the depot. In this paper, we compare these two methods from an inventory control perspective. We model the library system as a Markov Decision process. For one- and two-location systems, we derive analytical results for the average-cost optimal policy, showing that the decision to store items from the location at the depot satisfies a threshold structure depending on the number of rented items. For larger instances, an effective heuristic is proposed exploiting this threshold structure. In numerical experiments, important managerial insights are obtained by comparing cross docking and delayed shipments in different situations. Cross docking is shown to add most value in systems with low total stock, however, delayed shipments may achieve similar costs as cross docking when stock is high or when tours frequently visit all locations. Furthermore, effective decisions can be based on simple model formulations with memoryless rental time distributions. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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