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5.5 End of Life (EOL) Management

EOL is a financial event, not just an operational stop. A poorly managed discontinuation results in "Stranded Inventory" (dead cash) or "Service Gaps" (breach of contract). The objective is a controlled landing: zero residual inventory liability and 100% fulfillment of contractual service obligations.

Phase 1: The LTB Sequence (Last Time Buy)

The Product Discontinuation Notice (PDN) triggers the countdown. Synchronization between component availability and customer demand is critical.

Timeline Protocol

  1. PDN Issuance (T-Minus 6 Months): Formal notification to customers. Must include:
    • Reason for EOL (e.g., component obsolescence, technology refresh).
    • Last Order Date (LOD).
    • Last Ship Date (LSD).
  2. LTB Window: The period for customers to place final orders.
  3. Validation: Cross-check LTB orders against raw material availability.

Commitment Logic

  • IF Customer places LTB order → THEN Terms are automatically NCNR (Non-Cancelable, Non-Returnable). No exceptions.
  • IF Critical Component is EOL → THEN Secure component stock before issuing PDN to prevent market scalping.

Pro-Tip: Do not calculate LTB based on current run-rates. Customers will "hoard" or "dump" inventory based on their own product transitions. Force a hard PO commit; do not trust a forecast.

Phase 2: Final Build & Service Stock Planning

The Final Build is the last opportunity to manufacture Finished Goods (FG) and Spare Parts. Once the line is dismantled, re-initialization costs are prohibitive.

Service Stock Calculation

You must bank enough spares to cover the warranty period (e.g., 3-5 years).

Formula:

Required Spares = (Active Install Base x Failure Rate (%)) x Remaining Warranty Years + Safety Buffer

Production Logic

  • Scrap Allowance: Add 3–5% raw material overage. If you run short on a $0.10 resistor during the final build, you cannot complete the $500 unit.
  • Yield Lock: Do not introduce process changes (ECOs) during the final build. Stability > Optimization.

Phase 3: Disposition & Liability (E&O)

After the Last Ship Date, remaining materials are liabilities (Excess & Obsolete).

Liability Assignment

  • Unique Parts: Customer pays 100%. These were bought specifically for their BOM.
  • Common Parts: Factory (CM) absorbs or returns to distribution (restocking fee applies).
  • Work in Progress (WIP): Must be completed to FG or scrapped immediately.

Tooling Disposition

  • Consign: Ship molds/fixtures to the customer (if they own them).
  • Store: Archive for 3-5 years if service builds are possible.
  • Destroy: If proprietary IP is at risk, physically destroy molds and issue a Certificate of Destruction (COD) with photographic evidence.

Phase 4: Documentation & Archiving

When the team disbands, tribal knowledge evaporates. Archive the "DNA" of the product to ensure future questions can be answered without the original engineers.

The "Golden Archive" Structure

  1. Manufacturing Data: Final BOM, Gerber Files, Pick & Place Files, Stencil designs.
  2. Test Environment: Firmware images (hex/bin), Test Fixture schematics, specific test limits/scripts.
  3. Compliance: CE/FCC certificates, Safety Reports, UL files (essential for legal defense).
  4. Master Sample: Keep 2x Golden Samples + 2x Known Bad Units (for test calibration).

Final Checklist

Control Point

Critical Threshold / Action

Logic / Risk

Financial Terms

NCNR Signed

Without NCNR, a customer cancellation leaves you with unsellable scrap.

Material Audit

Clear the Pipeline

Cancel open POs with vendors immediately after the Final Build calculation.

Service Stock

Allocated Physically

Segregate service stock from general inventory. Do not accidentally sell your warranty buffer.

ERP Status

Set to "Obsolete"

Block new sales orders in the system. Prevent "Ghost Orders."

Tooling

Disposition Signed

Molds take up space and rust. Get a decision: Ship, Store, or Scrap.