An electrical contractor wins a six-month commercial wiring project and immediately purchases the entire required inventory, including expensive lighting fixtures that will not be installed until month five. A few weeks later, the contractor struggles to cover the company's weekly payroll because their available funds are tied up in those uninstalled materials. By purchasing too much inventory before it is needed, the contractor is experiencing _____, a direct consequence of poor material management.
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Job-Coding Material Purchases for Electrical Contractors
Match each consequence of poor material management with its corresponding cause in an electrical contracting business.
When an electrical contractor purchases large quantities of materials well before they are needed for upcoming jobs, which consequence of poor material management is most likely to occur?
Profit erosion on a job typically occurs when an electrical contractor purchases project materials immediately after the estimate is approved, effectively locking in the current prices.
Arrange the following events in the chronological order that demonstrates how poor procurement timing leads to profit erosion on a fixed-price electrical project.
An electrical contractor wins a six-month commercial wiring project and immediately purchases the entire required inventory, including expensive lighting fixtures that will not be installed until month five. A few weeks later, the contractor struggles to cover the company's weekly payroll because their available funds are tied up in those uninstalled materials. By purchasing too much inventory before it is needed, the contractor is experiencing _____, a direct consequence of poor material management.
Two electrical contractors are debating the best way to handle materials for a large commercial tenant-improvement project that will take four months. Contractor A says: 'I always buy everything on Day One so I know I've locked in today's prices and nothing will be back-ordered. That way I avoid any job delays.' Contractor B says: 'I schedule material deliveries in phases—only ordering what I need for the next two to three weeks at a time, even though prices might go up a little on later orders.' Which of the following best evaluates these two approaches?