Estimate vendor managed inventory savings from reduced ordering costs, lower safety stock, fewer stockouts, and VMI service fees.
Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) is a supply chain practice where the supplier monitors the buyer's inventory levels and makes replenishment decisions. The supplier has visibility into consumption data and proactively ships materials to maintain agreed-upon stock levels, eliminating the need for purchase orders from the buyer.
VMI generates savings through multiple channels: reduced ordering costs (fewer POs to process), lower safety stock (supplier's visibility reduces demand uncertainty), fewer stockouts (proactive replenishment), and reduced administrative overhead. However, VMI programs typically involve a service fee from the supplier.
This calculator estimates the total annual savings from implementing VMI against the service fee, helping you build a business case for VMI adoption or evaluate an existing program's effectiveness.
This measurement forms a critical foundation for capacity planning, helping teams align production capabilities with demand forecasts and strategic business objectives throughout the planning cycle. Integrating this calculation into regular operational reviews ensures that key decisions are grounded in current data rather than outdated assumptions or rough approximations from the past.
VMI shifts the replenishment burden to the supplier who often has better demand visibility and logistics efficiency. Quantifying the savings against fees ensures VMI delivers real value and supports supplier negotiations. Consistent measurement creates a reliable baseline for tracking improvements over time and demonstrating return on investment for process optimization initiatives.
VMI Savings = Ordering Savings + Safety Stock Savings + Stockout Savings − VMI Fee Ordering Savings = Current Ordering Cost × Reduction % Safety Stock Savings = Current SS Value × Carrying Rate × Reduction % Stockout Savings = Current Stockout Cost × Reduction %
Result: $60,000 net annual savings
Ordering savings $45,000 + safety stock carrying savings $30,000 + stockout reduction $20,000 = $95,000 gross savings. Minus $35,000 VMI fee = $60,000 net savings per year.
Start with a pilot of 5-10 high-volume SKUs with a trusted supplier. Set up data sharing infrastructure (EDI 852/846 or cloud portal). Define inventory parameters (min, max, target) and establish exception handling procedures. Monitor performance for 3-6 months before expanding.
Track fill rate, inventory turns, number of stockouts, PO line count reduction, and total cost of ownership. Compare these metrics to the pre-VMI baseline to quantify actual savings versus the initial projection.
VMI is a replenishment model; consignment is an ownership model. VMI means the supplier decides what to ship; consignment means the supplier owns the stock until consumption. They are complementary — many advanced programs combine both.
Vendor Managed Inventory is a collaborative supply chain model where the supplier takes responsibility for maintaining inventory levels at the buyer's location based on real-time consumption data. Monitoring trends in this area over successive periods will highlight improvement opportunities and confirm whether changes are producing the desired effect.
The supplier has direct visibility into consumption patterns and can respond proactively. This reduces demand uncertainty from the supplier's perspective, enabling lower safety stock without more stockouts.
At minimum, the supplier needs current on-hand quantities and consumption rates, typically transmitted daily via EDI, API, or a shared cloud platform. Forecast data further improves supplier planning.
VMI service fees compensate the supplier for the additional planning and logistics effort. Fees may be a fixed monthly charge, a per-item charge, or a percentage of spend. They should be less than the buyer's savings.
Yes, especially with distributors who offer VMI services. Cloud-based inventory platforms have reduced the technology barrier, making VMI accessible even to smaller operations.
Risks include over-reliance on a single supplier, loss of purchasing control, data sharing concerns, and potentially higher prices. Mitigate these with clear SLAs, regular performance reviews, and contractual safeguards.