The economic order-quantity (EOQ) model considers the trade-off between ordering cost and storage cost in choosing the quantity to use in replenishing item inventories. A larger order-quantity reduces ordering frequency, and, hence ordering cost/month, but requires holding a larger average inventory, which increases storage (holding) cost/month. On the other hand, a smaller order-quantity reduces average inventory but requires more frequent ordering and higher ordering cost/month. The cost- minimizing order-quantity is called the Economic Order Quantity (EOQ). This builds intuition about the robustness of EOQ, which makes the model useful for management decision-making even if its inputs (parameters) are only known to be within a range of possible values. This also provides intuition about choosing an inventory-management system, not just an EOQ Period Order Quantity (POQ) is the model with the best overall performance [9], which the fixed number of periods is determined as the economic time between orders and/or fixed number of periods as lot sizes.