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
- 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).
- LTB Window: The period for customers to place final orders.
- 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
- Manufacturing Data: Final BOM, Gerber Files, Pick & Place Files, Stencil designs.
- Test Environment: Firmware images (hex/bin), Test Fixture schematics, specific test limits/scripts.
- Compliance: CE/FCC certificates, Safety Reports, UL files (essential for legal defense).
- 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. |