Forecasting
Forecasting
Forecasting
▶ What Is Forecasting?
▶ The Strategic Importance of
Forecasting
▶ Seven Steps in the Forecasting
System
▶ Forecasting Approaches
Figure 2.5
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Product Life Cycle
Introduction Growth Maturity Decline
Product design and Forecasting critical Standardization Little product
development Product and Fewer rapid differentiation
critical process reliability product changes, Cost
Frequent product Competitive more minor minimization
and process changes
Strategy/Issues
product Overcapacity in
OMStrategy/Issues
runs
Product
improvement and
cost cutting
Figure 2.5
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Types of Forecasts
1. Economic forecasts
► Address business cycle – inflation rate, money
supply, housing starts, etc.
2. Technological forecasts
► Predict rate of technological progress
► Impacts development of new products
3. Demand forecasts
► Predict sales of existing products and services
► Decision makers
► Staff
► Respondents Respondents
(People who can make
valuable judgments)
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Sales Force Composite
Trend Cyclical
Seasonal Random
Seasonal peaks
Actual demand
line
Average demand
over 4 years
Random variation
| | | |
1 2 3 4
Time (years)
Figure 4.1
0 5 10 15 20
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Random Component
► Erratic, unsystematic, ‘residual’
fluctuations
► Due to random variation or unforeseen
events
► Short duration
and nonrepeating
M T W T
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Naive Approach
► Assumes demand in next
period is the same as
demand in most recent period
► e.g., If January sales were 68, then
February sales will be 68
► Sometimes cost effective and
efficient
► Can be good starting point
Moving average =
å demand in previous n periods
n
(( )(
Weighted å Weight for period n Demand in period n
moving =
))
average å Weights
30 –
25 –
Sales demand
20 –
15 – Actual sales
10 – Moving average
(from Example 1)
5–
| | | | | | | | | | | |
J F M A M J J A S O N D
Figure 4.2 Month
Ft = Ft – 1 + (At – 1 – Ft – 1)
WEIGHT ASSIGNED TO
MOST 2ND MOST 3RD MOST 4th MOST 5th MOST
RECENT RECENT RECENT RECENT RECENT
SMOOTHING PERIOD PERIOD PERIOD PERIOD PERIOD
CONSTANT ( ) (1 – ) (1 – )2 (1 – )3 (1 – )4
= .1 .1 .09 .081 .073 .066
Actual = .5
demand
200 –
Demand
175 –
= .1
150 – | | | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Quarter
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Impact of Different
225 –
Actual = .5
Choose high
► 200 – of values
demand
when underlying average
Demand
is likely to change
175 –
► Choose low values of
when underlying average = .1
is–stable
150 | | | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Quarter
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Example
MAD =
å Actual - Forecast
n
Σ|Deviations|
MAD = 10.31 12.33
n
å (Forecast errors)
2
MSE =
n
å (Forecast errors)
2
MAPE =
å absolute percent error 44.75%
= = 5.59%
n 8
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Comparison of Measures
TABLE 4.1 Comparison of Measures of Forecast Error
Ft = (At - 1) + (1 - )(Ft - 1 + Tt - 1)
Tt = b(Ft - Ft - 1) + (1 - b)Tt - 1
where Ft = exponentially smoothed forecast average
Tt = exponentially smoothed trend
At = actual demand
= smoothing constant for average (0 ≤ ≤ 1)
b = smoothing constant for trend (0 ≤ b ≤ 1)
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Exponential Smoothing with
Trend Adjustment
Step 1: Compute Ft
Step 2: Compute Tt
Step 3: Calculate the forecast FITt = Ft + Tt
1 12 6 21
2 17 7 31
3 20 8 28
4 19 9 36
5 24 10 ?
= .2 b = .4
25 –
20 –
15 –
10 – Forecast including trend (FITt)
5 – with = .2 and b = .4
0 –
| | | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Time (months)
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Trend Projections
Fitting a trend line to historical data points to
project into the medium to long-range
Linear trends can be found using the least
squares technique
y^ = a + bx
where y^ = computed value of the variable to be predicted
(dependent variable)
a = y-axis intercept
b = slope of the regression line
x = the independent variable
Deviation5 Deviation6
Deviation3
Least squares method minimizes the
sum of Deviation
the squared
4
errors (deviations)
Deviation1
(error) Deviation2
Trend line, y^ = a + bx
| | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Figure 4.4
Time period
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Least Squares Method
Equations to calculate the regression variables
ŷ = a+ bx
b=
å xy - nxy
å x - nx
2 2
a = y - bx
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Least Squares Example
ELECTRICAL ELECTRICAL
YEAR POWER DEMAND YEAR POWER DEMAND
1 74 5 105
2 79 6 142
3 80 7 122
4 90
x=
å x 28
= =4 y=
å y 692
= = 98.86
n 7 n 7
()
2 79 4 158
3
a = y - bx = 98.8680
-10.54 4 = 56.70 9 240
4 90 16 360
5 105 ŷ = 56.70 +10.54x25
Thus, 525
6 142 36 852
7 122 49 854
Σx = 28 Σy = 692 Σx2 = 140 Σxy = 3,063
x=
å
Demandx in
= =4 y=
å
28year 8 = 56.70 y+ 10.54(8)
=
692
= 98.86
n 7 = 141.02,
n or 141
7 megawatts
140 –
130 –
120 –
110 –
100 –
90 –
80 –
70 –
60 –
50 –
| | | | | | | | |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Year Figure 4.5
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Least Squares Requirements
The multiplicative
seasonal model can
adjust trend data for
seasonal variations
in demand
110 –
100 –
90 –
80 –
70 –
| | | | | | | | | | | |
J F M A M J J A S O N D
Time
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Correlation
► How strong is the linear relationship
between the variables?
► Correlation does not necessarily imply
causality!
► Coefficient of correlation, r,
measures degree of association
► Values range from -1 to +1
x x
(a) Perfect negative (e) Perfect positive
correlation, r = –1 y y correlation, r = 1
y
x x
(b) Negative correlation (d) Positive correlation
x
(c) No correlation, r = 0
–1.0 –0.8 –0.6 –0.4 –0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
Correlation coefficient values
nå xy - å xå y
r=
é ùé ù
êënå x - ( )
å x úûêënå y - ( )
å y úû
2 2
2 2
(6)(51.5) – (18)(15.0)
r=
é(6)(80) – (18)2 ùé(16)(39.5) – (15.0)2 ù
ë ûë û
309 - 270 39 39
= = = = .901
(156)(12) 1,872 43.3
ŷ = a+ b1x1 + b2 x2
=
å (Actual demand in period i -Forecast demand in period i )
å Actual -Forecast
n
0 MADs Acceptable
range
–
Lower control limit
Time
Figure 4.11