Inventory control system
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An inventory control system is a process for managing and locating objects or materials. In common usage, the term may also refer to just the software components.
Modern inventory control systems often rely upon barcodes and radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags to provide automatic identification of inventory objects. Inventory objects could include any kind of physical asset: merchandise, consumables, fixed assets, circulating tools, library books, or capital equipment. To record an inventory transaction, the system uses a barcode scanner or RFID reader to automatically identify the inventory object, and then collects additional information from the operators via fixed terminals (workstations), or mobile computers.[1]
References
- ^ Barcode, Barry. "Grocery Store Inventory Control". Midcomdata. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
See also
- Automated identification and data capture
- Document automation
- Economic order quantity
- Economic lot scheduling problem
- Newsvendor model
- Scan-based trading
- Storage management system
- Supply chain management
- Vendor-managed inventory
- Warehouse management system