Control What Enters, What Is Stored, and What Leaves Your Warehouse
A warehouse without a system is inventory with a roof. The costs that do not appear on a standard income statement, time spent searching for stock that should have a known address, capital locked in slow-moving inventory that has not been evaluated in two years, shrinkage discovered at year-end physical count that nobody can trace back to a cause, are real costs. They just require a different kind of reading to find. This book is for operators who want to find those costs, quantify them, and build the systems that eliminate them, without buying software first.
This book was originally written in Bahasa Indonesia for Indonesian operators. Examples, regulations, currency (Rupiah), and institutional references reflect Indonesian context. The frameworks, diagnostics, ratios, and operator habits described apply broadly to small and mid-sized businesses in other emerging markets and to many developed-market SME settings as well.
The book is organized from the most operational to the most financial. The first six chapters build an accurate and efficient warehouse system from scratch: location coding, receiving procedures, cycle counting, physical FIFO enforcement, SKU classification by movement data, and multi-location reconciliation without centralized software. The last four chapters add what is needed for that system to hold up under external scrutiny: audit trail documentation, PSAK 14 (inventory write-down, equivalent to IAS 2) compliance procedures, and inventory valuation policy in a format verifiable by a public accounting firm. The anchor example, an East Java kitchenware importer, appears at three stages: year one (5-8 percent shrinkage, no location system), year six (layout redesigned by movement data, shrinkage below 1 percent, cycle time down 40 percent), and year eleven (the gap between a good operating system and an audit-ready one, found by auditors during private placement due diligence). GS1 Indonesia 2022 data frames what systematic improvement is worth: SME distribution businesses that resolved their warehouse problems freed working capital equivalent to 15-25 percent of actual inventory value.
What you'll find
- Layout and slotting methodology: how to read actual movement data from existing sales records to classify SKUs into Fast, Slow, and Non-moving zones, and how to reorganize storage around that classification
- A warehouse location coding system implementable in one working day: the hierarchy, the label format, and why "everyone knows where it is" fails the moment the person who knows is unavailable
- Receiving procedures that generate an audit trail from the moment goods arrive: verification against purchase order, condition inspection, location assignment before any item is stored
- Cycle counting versus full physical inventory count: when each is appropriate, how to investigate discrepancies rather than simply correct them, and how consistent small-count cycles make the annual full count shorter and more accurate
- Physical FIFO enforcement: how to design the flow of a receiving bay so that older lots are automatically positioned closer to the picking zone, compliance through layout rather than through instruction
- Multi-location inventory reconciliation without centralized software: a standardized format that aggregates stock positions across warehouses and can be maintained via email or messaging
- Hidden cost calculation: how to find the financial value of warehouse inefficiency distributed across income statement line items that do not say "warehouse"
- PSAK 14 (equivalent to IAS 2) compliance for slow-moving and dead stock: when write-down is required, what documentation supports the decision, and how to build the evaluation procedure before an auditor asks for it
Who this is for
- Small-business owners running a warehouse on memory and goodwill, who need a location system and recording discipline before the next stock count reveals a gap they cannot explain
- Mid-cap operators with multiple warehouse locations who need consistent SKU classification, physical FIFO enforcement, and a shrinkage investigation protocol that goes beyond writing off the difference
- Pre-IPO directors who need PSAK 14 write-down procedures, audit trail documentation, and inventory valuation policy in a format a public accounting firm can verify
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About the author
Ibrahim Anwar, known as Hibranwar, is an entrepreneur and writer at the intersection of engineering, business, and content. Dutch Literature from Universitas Indonesia. He runs operating businesses across industrial pump distribution, engineering services, and handmade leather craft, and writes from the seat of the operator. Hundreds of digital publications. Writing as system, not expression. Direct and functional. ORCID 0009-0006-0425-4923. He ran his first serious physical stock count and found a 6-8 percent discrepancy, not from theft but from a location system that lived entirely in the head of one person. This book is the system built to replace that.