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Explore the definition, rules, methods, and techniques of forecasting to predict internal costs, market trends, and plan effectively. Learn qualitative and quantitative methods with error measurement to enhance accuracy.
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Forecasting Ross L. Fink
Forecasting • Definition--Forecasting tries to predict the future • Used for planning purposes • Forecasting goes beyond predicting demand • Internal manufacturing costs • Cost of raw materials and component parts • Cost and availability of energy • Interest rates • Stock prices
Rules of Forecasting • Your forecast is never correct • Forecasts assume some underlying causal system • Generally, the shorter the time horizon of the forecast, the more accurate the forecast • Generally, forecasting aggregations (groups of items) is more accurate than forecasting individual items
Forecasting Methods • Qualitative • Quantitative
Qualitative Forecasting Methods • Consumer surveys • Test marketing • Sales force composite • Executive opinion • Delphi technique • Panel of experts
Quantitative Forecasting Methods • Time series • Naïve • Moving averages • Exponential smoothing • Box-Jenkins • Associative or causal models • Simple regression • Multiple regression
Decomposition of Time Series Data • Believe that data consists of components • Trend • Seasons • Cycles • Random and irregular variations • Approach--isolate components and forecast separately and then recombine to obtain final forecast
Ways to Select Forecasting Method • Noise-dampening (smoothing) • Response (lag) • Error measurement
Error Measurement • Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD)--Most popular • Average Error (AE) or bias • Mean Square Error (MSE) • Mean Absolute Percent Error (MAPE) • Standard deviation
Error • where, • Et = error for period t • At = actual demand for period t • Ft = forecast for period t
Simple Exponential Smoothing OR Alpha (smoothing Constant) is between 0 and 1