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Stock-taking

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(Redirected from Stocktaking) Physical verification of the quantities and condition of items held in an inventory or warehouse
Photograph of rows of shelves with boxes on them
A warehouse filled with stock

Stock-taking or "inventory checking" or "wall-to-wall" is the physical verification of the quantities and condition of items held in an inventory or warehouse. This may be done to provide an audit of existing stock. It is also the source of stock discrepancy information. While they are often used interchangeably, stock and inventory are two different things. Stock is the products sold by a business. Inventory includes all items required to make, store or sell your stock.

Stock-taking may be performed as an intensive annual, end of fiscal year, procedure or may be done continuously by means of a cycle count. An annual end of fiscal year stock-taking is typically undertaken for use in a company's financial statements. It is often done in the presence of the external auditors who are auditing the financial statements.

Periodic counting is usually undertaken for regular, inexpensive items. The term "periodic" may refer to annual stock count. However, "periodic" may also refer to half yearly, seasonal, quarterly, monthly, bi-monthly or daily. For expensive items a shorter period of stock-taking is preferred.

A stock-take sale is a sale with reduced prices in a shop designed to sell off stock from previous seasons. This makes the task of stock-taking easier.

Another purpose of stock take is determination of a cutoff point i.e. what was the stock position of the company/organization at a specific point of time.

However, such stock-taking tasks are often laborious and often lead to significant warehouse operational downtime, ranging from days to weeks.

References

  1. Unleashed Software, Stocktaking
  2. Antony Wild (2004), "Inventory checking (stocktaking)", Improving inventory record accuracy: getting your stock information right, pp. 96–107, ISBN 978-0-7506-5900-0
  3. Applegate, M., How Often Should You Do Inventory?, accessed 2 February 2017

See also


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