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Planificación Agregada×Ruteo con Gestión de Inventario×Kanban×
CampoGestión de operacionesGestión de operacionesGestión de operaciones
FamiliaMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Año de origen199220141950
Autor originalWallace, T. F.Coelho, L. C., Cordeau, J. F., & Laporte, G.Taiichi Ohno
TipoDemand-supply planning frameworkOptimization problemProduction control system
Fuente seminalWallace, T. F. (1992). Sales & Operations Planning: The how-to handbook. Cincinnati: APICS Publications. link ↗Coelho, L. C., Cordeau, J. F., & Laporte, G. (2014). Thirty years of inventory routing. Transportation Research Part B: Methodological, 55, 28-67. DOI ↗Ohno, T. (1988). Toyota production system: Beyond large-scale production. Cambridge, MA: Productivity Press. link ↗
Aliassales and operations planning, production planningIRP, vendor-managed logisticsvisual management, pull system
Relacionados555
ResumenAggregate Planning (or Sales & Operations Planning, S&OP) is a collaborative, iterative process that balances demand and supply at a high level—typically grouping products into families and planning over a 3–18 month horizon. Developed formally by Tom Wallace and popularized through APICS, aggregate planning helps organizations align sales forecasts, production capacity, inventory, and workforce to meet demand efficiently while managing costs. It serves as the bridge between strategic business plans and detailed operational execution.The Inventory Routing Problem (IRP) is an optimization problem that jointly determines inventory levels at customer locations, delivery routes, and shipment quantities to minimize total logistics and inventory holding costs. Rather than treating inventory management and vehicle routing as separate decisions, IRP recognizes that they are interdependent: larger shipments reduce routing costs but increase inventory holding costs, and vice versa. IRP is solved using mixed-integer programming, heuristics, and metaheuristics, and is a cornerstone of vendor-managed inventory (VMI) programs.Kanban is a pull-based production control system developed by Taiichi Ohno at Toyota in the 1950s that uses visual signals (traditionally cards or bins) to trigger production and movement of materials based on actual demand rather than forecasts. The Japanese word 'kanban' means 'visual card' or 'sign,' and the system operates on the principle that work should flow in response to downstream requirements. Kanban is a foundational element of the Toyota Production System and lean manufacturing, enabling just-in-time production, reduced inventory, and improved flow efficiency.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Aggregate Planning · Inventory Routing · Kanban. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare