When is the next order? Nowcasting channel inventories with point-of-sales data to predict the timing of retail orders
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6554597
DOI10.1016/J.EJOR.2023.10.038MaRDI QIDQ6554597
Publication date: 13 June 2024
Published in: European Journal of Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Cites Work
- A framework for the value of information in inventory replenishment
- Customer reviews for demand distribution and sales nowcasting: a big data approach
- A greedy aggregation-decomposition method for intermittent demand forecasting in fashion retailing
- Exploiting elapsed time for managing intermittent demand for spare parts
- Decision support for selecting the optimal product unpacking location in a retail supply chain
- Factors that affect the improvement of demand forecast accuracy through point-of-sale reporting
- Supply chain forecasting when information is not shared
- Impact of demand correlation on the value of and incentives for information sharing in a supply chain
- A two-step method for forecasting spare parts demand using information on component repairs
- Elucidate structure in intermittent demand series
- Using shared sell-through data to forecast wholesaler demand in multi-echelon supply chains
- We need to talk about intermittent demand forecasting
- Predicting retailer orders with POS and order data: the inventory balance effect
- An inventory control system for spare parts at a refinery: an empirical comparison of different re-order point methods
- Supply Chain Inventory Management and the Value of Shared Information
- Information Sharing in a Supply Chain: A Note on its Value when Demand Is Nonstationary
- Supply Chain Decision Making: Will Shorter Cycle Times and Shared Point-of-Sale Information Necessarily Help?
- Ordering Behavior in Retail Stores and Implications for Automated Replenishment
- Approximation of the probability distribution of the customer waiting time under an (r, s, q) inventory policy in discrete time
- Periodic control of intermittent demand items: theory and empirical analysis
- Optimal Centralized Ordering Policies in Multi-Echelon Inventory Systems with Correlated Demands
- Information Distortion in a Supply Chain: The Bullwhip Effect
- Forecasting and Stock Control for Intermittent Demands
- Lumpy and intermittent retail demand forecasts with score-driven models
This page was built for publication: When is the next order? Nowcasting channel inventories with point-of-sales data to predict the timing of retail orders
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6554597)