It may be given in a different time unit, say annual or quarterly demand. Just make necessary adjustments depending on the given season. If still not given, the safest would be the average of the overall data :)
Hi, what if I have only data of the last year. I want to find the seasonal index, but I want to do it in that way: instead of years months, and instead of the months I want to write 31 days. Would it be right? Thank you!
Hi ma'am. You saved me sa report ko. Naiintindihan ko na siya 😭🥰🥰
yay! You’re welcome!
Very helpful and easy to comprehend :) thank you very much!
you’re welcome! Stay tuned for more IE-related courses in the future. Thank you for watching!
hey, thank you so so much I was stuck on this part while studying. Have an amazing day
A A A A A A A A you’re welcome!
Ma'am how did you find the average? I mean how do you compute to get the average?
Hi! Average is just the sum of years 2007-2009, then divide by 3 for each month.
@@EzrhaGodilano 80+85+100/3=88,3 in the first column.
Is the expected monthly demand always given? If not, how to get it? Thank you.
It may be given in a different time unit, say annual or quarterly demand. Just make necessary adjustments depending on the given season. If still not given, the safest would be the average of the overall data :)
Hi, what if I have only data of the last year. I want to find the seasonal index, but I want to do it in that way: instead of years months, and instead of the months I want to write 31 days. Would it be right?
Thank you!
Hello! I’m not sure if I understand your question. Maybe you can email me in the contact details I provided, so I can help you further :)
Hi Ezrha, thank you for the nice and informative video.
Thank you for watching!
Hi, great video. Do you have an email where I can reach out with a question based on this ? Thanks
hello! you can reach me at ezrha.godilano@gmail.com :)
Thank you so much for this!
krimson. You’re welcome! Thank you for watching!