ABC classification, criticality ratings, min/max stock formulas, automatic consumption tracking through work orders, and supplier-relationship strategy.
Bad spare parts management costs money simultaneously in two directions, which is why so many operations suffer from both excess inventory AND stockouts at the same time.
Over-stocking ties up capital in slow-moving parts that sit on shelves for years. The carrying cost is real: cash tied up in inventory cannot fund operational improvement; storage space is occupied; old stock sometimes expires (lubricants, seals) or becomes obsolete when equipment is replaced. SMB and mid-market operations routinely have $50K-$300K of dust-collecting parts in unmanaged storerooms.
Under-stocking causes repair delays. A 2-hour repair becomes 2 days when the right part is out of stock and must be ordered. Emergency-repair labour is wasted waiting for parts; production downtime extends; expedite shipping fees pile up. Most teams suffer both problems at once because the parts they have are the wrong ones.
ABC analysis sorts parts by consumption value (unit cost Γ annual consumption frequency). The classification drives different inventory-management intensity:
ABC tells you about cost and usage. It does not tell you about consequence. A part that is rarely used (C class on consumption metrics) but catastrophic when unavailable still needs minimum stock regardless of usage frequency. A motor-control fuse that costs $8 and is replaced once every 18 months is a C part on consumption β but production stops when it blows and there is no spare in stock. Critical C parts get minimum stock of 1 unit (or sometimes 2-3) regardless of consumption frequency.
Assign a separate criticality rating to every part: Critical (production stops or safety risk if unavailable), Important (significant impact, workaround possible), Standard (inconvenient if unavailable, easy substitute or workaround). The combination of ABC class Γ Criticality rating drives stocking strategy.
Standard formula: Minimum Stock = (Average Daily Usage Γ Supplier Lead Time in Days) + Safety Stock
Example calculation: hydraulic seal used 2 per week, 5-day supplier lead time, A-class part with high consumption. Daily usage = 2 Γ· 7 = 0.28. Lead-time consumption = 0.28 Γ 5 = 1.4. Safety stock for A part = 2 weeks consumption = 4. Minimum = 1.4 + 4 = 5.4 β round up to 6 units.
Safety stock guidelines by class:
Maximum stock prevents over-investment in inventory. Standard formula: Maximum = Minimum + Reorder Quantity. The reorder quantity is set to balance order frequency against per-order overhead. For most SMB operations: A parts reorder monthly (so reorder quantity = 1 month consumption), B parts reorder quarterly (= 3 month consumption), C parts reorder annually or as needed.
When current stock + on-order would exceed maximum, do not place additional orders. Maximum stock prevents the "we keep ordering this every time it gets close to minimum" pattern that produces over-stocking on slow-moving items.
The most powerful spare parts practice is linking parts to the assets that consume them and to the work orders that issue them. When a technician completes a PM and logs a filter change in the work order, inventory automatically decreases by one filter. When stock drops below minimum, an alert fires to the maintenance manager. The next reorder happens before stockout occurs.
Without this linkage, parts counting is manual and the data is always wrong. "We are out of bearings" arrives at the worst possible moment, during an emergency repair, with no advance notice. This pattern is the single biggest driver of unnecessary parts-related downtime in SMB and mid-market operations.
Even the best parts data fails if the physical storeroom is chaotic. Practical storeroom organisation:
Parts management is half about your inventory and half about your supplier relationships:
Seven most common parts management mistakes:
Modern CMMS like Maintoro automates the parts-to-work-order linkage that is the foundation of accurate inventory. Issue a part to a work order on mobile during a repair β inventory automatically decreases. Stock drops below minimum β alert fires to maintenance manager via push notification and email. Reorder triggers can integrate with procurement systems via REST API.
Most SMB teams report carrying-cost reductions of 15-30% within the first year of structured parts management implementation, with simultaneous reduction in stockout-driven repair delays. The economics typically pay back the CMMS investment many times over from parts management improvements alone β even before considering the broader maintenance benefits.
Practical implementation phasing:
Maintoro links parts to assets and work orders. Set min/max levels, track consumption, get low-stock alerts. Pro plan: full inventory management included.
Start free β no credit card