Fillrate

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The fillrate is the number of pixels a video card can generate and display on the screen in a second.

Video cards have usually been measured in megapixels per second but newer cards may generate gigapixels per second. The fillrate is used as a show of muscle between different video card manufacturers (ATI and NVIDIA), but has lost some value as the cards are required to have more shader power than pure fillrate.

References:

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Supply Chain Based definition
 Fill Rate definitions and calculations can vary greatly. In the broadest sense, Fill Rate calculates the service level between 2 parties. It is usually a measure of shipping performance expressed as a percentage.

Sample Fill Rate Metrics:

Line Count Fill Rate: The amount of order lines shipped on the initial shipment verses the amount of lines ordered. This measure may or may not take into consideration the requested delivery date (see On Time Delivery) example- ABC Company orders 10 products (one order line each) on its Purchase Order #1234. The manufacturer ships out 7 line items on March 1 and the remaining 3 items on March 10. The Fill Rate for this Purchase Order is 70%. It is calculated once the initial shipment takes place. Calculation: Number of Order Lines Shipped on the Initial Order* / Total Number of Order Lines Ordered (7/10 = 70%)

SKU Fill Rate: The number of SKU's (Stock Keeping Units) ordered and shipped is taken into consideration. Above, we consider each Order Line to have an equal value (1 ). Here, we count the SKU's per Order Line. example: If on Line 1, the order was for 30 skus of product "AB" and on line 2, they ordered 10 skus of item "AC". If Line 1 ships on April 1 and line 2 on April 20, the the SKU Fill Rate is 75% Calculation: Number of SKUs Shipped on the Initial Shipment / Total Number of SKUs Ordered (30/40 = 75%).

Case Fill Rate: The amount of cases shipped on the initial shipment verses the amount of cases ordered. example- ABC Company orders 6 products that total 200 cases, on its Purchase Order #1235. The manufacturer ships out 140 cases on 3/1/01 and the remaining 60 cases on 3/10/01. The Fill Rate for this Purchase Order is 70%. It is calculated once the initial shipment takes place. The number of Order Lines is not considered in this calculation. This Fill Rate measure gives "weight" to the order lines that are shipped out. Calculation: Number of Cases Shipped on the Initial Order / Total Number of Cases Ordered . (140/200 = 70%)

Value Fill Rate: Same as above, except the order line value is used instead of cases. Calculation: Value of Order Lines Shipped on the Initial Order / Total Value of the Order ($400/$500 = 80%)

What happens if a customer orders 10 products, but then decides to expedite out just one of them? Should the other 9 products be counted as a Fill Rate "miss"? ( 1 shipped / 10 ordered = 10%). The answer is no. You should factor rushed lines out of your Fill Rate calculation. This can usually be done by identifying the routing code (as in an SAP system) or by the carrier (FEDX).