For many among us in early years (and much later as well most probably …) LEGO® bricks embody a gateway to imagination and creativity. Buildings and structures, ships and vessels, landscapes and cities, individuals and societies, worlds and even universes … those blocks are finite yet make all seem possible, almost endlessly varied in color, shape and size.
Hence the test was maybe less letting free reign to inventing than being faced with straightforward yet compelling challenges … Are the pieces available ? Are they the right ones ? Should they be allocated differently ? Should some tradeoff be exercised ? Is time sufficient to put them into use ? Do some remain idle ? Could they be obsolete ?
Blocks used -say- within a tower building or a rocket ship enable to complete the project as designed. Though the bigger it is, the more burden is applied on available stock and conceivably depleting it. Consecutively it would make it more difficult other and possibly better allocation.
Quite some problem solving skills put to the test, and akin to self teaching inventory management to simultaneously adjust service to customer, cost to operate and cash holding.
Inventory management may not have all the glamour of other supply chain areas. It is an overlooked and decisive activity where our whimsical LEGO® tower building or rocket ship has the required size, content, shape and color. It carries out risk assessment, identifies exposure and initiate optimization, to ensure customer service, while lowering cost and cash holding.