Chapter 3: Strategic Capacity Management
Chapter 3: Strategic Capacity Management
We will discuss
What is capacity? The concept of process capacity Capacity utilization Economies and diseconomies of scale Capacity balance Little's law
Relating inventory, flow time, and flow rate
Use the capacity at an underutilized process step to increase the capacity at a bottleneck
Increase the output at the same cost
A bottleneck is the weakest link Process capacity = minimum {Res 1 capacity,. Res 2 capacity, )
Capacity Utilization
Capacity utilization rate = Capacity used / Best operating level
Capacity used rate of output actually achieved Best operating level capacity for which the process was designed
Underutilization
Answer: Capacity utilization rate = Capacity used . Best operating level = 83/120 =0.69 or 69%
100-unit plant
200-unit plant
300-unit plant
400-unit plant
Volume
Other Issues
Capacity Focus The concept of the focused factory holds that production facilities work best when they focus on a fairly limited set of production objectives Plants Within Plants (PWP)
Capacity Flexibility Flexible processes
Flexible workers
Flexible plants
Maintaining System Balance: Output of one stage is the exact input requirements for the next stage Balanced stages of production Units per month Stage 1 6,000 Stage 2 6,000 Stage 3 6,000
Littles Law
What it is: Inventory (I) = Flow Rate (R) * Flow Time (T)
Implications: Out of the three performance measures (I,R,T), two can be chosen by management, the other is GIVEN by nature Hold throughput (flow rate) constant: Reducing inventory = reducing flow time
Patients 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7:00 Inventory=Cumulative Inflow Cumulative Outflow Time Flow Time Inventory Cumulative Inflow Cumulative Outflow
8:00
9:00
10:00
11:00
12:00
13:00
14:00
15:00
16:00
17:00
18:00
Examples
Suppose that from 12 to 1 p.m. 200 students per hour enter the GQ and Airline check-in data indicate from 9 each student is in the system for an to 10 a.m. 255 passengers checked average of 45 minutes. What is the in. Moreover, based on the number average number of students in the waiting in line, airport management GQ? found that on average, 35 people Inventory = Flow Rate * Flow Time = 200 per hour * 45 minutes (= 0.75 were waiting to check in. How long hours) did the average passenger have to = 150 students wait? If ten students on average are waiting in line for sandwiches and each is in line for five minutes, on average, how many students are arrive each hour for sandwiches?
Flow Time = Inventory / Flow Rate = 35 passengers / 255 passengers per hour = 0.137 hours
Flow Rate = Inventory / Flow Time = 10 Students / 5 minutes = 0.083 hour = 120 students per hour
= 8.24 minutes
Batch of 60
Batch of 120
Batch of 300
60
120
180
240
300
Time [minutes]
Produce Part B (1 box corresponds to 12 units = 12 scooters) Set-up from Part A to Part B Produce Part A (1 box corresponds to 24 units = 12 scooters) Set-up from Part B to Part A
Number Produced in 720 Min Batch Size Part A Part B 12 60 60 60 180 180 120 240 240 300 300 300
0.15
0.1 0.05 250 290 330 370 450 490 530 570 130 170 210 410 610 650 50 90 0 10
Batch Size
Process 1 Set-up time, S Per unit time, p Capacity (B=12) Capacity (B=300) 120 minutes 2 minutes/unit 0.0833 units/min 0.4166 units/min
Batch size = 12 Setup Batch size Per unit Capacity (per min) Capacity (per hour) Process Capacity (per hour) 5 120 12 2 0.083 5 0 12 3 0.333 20
Capacity 0.5 0.45 0.4 0.35 0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 130 170 210 250 290 330 370 410 450 490 530 570 610 650 10 50 90 Batch Size Capacity of slowest step other than the one requiring set-up 1/p
Batch size is too small, process capacity could be increased (set-up step is at the bottleneck)
Batch size is too large, could be reduced with no negative impact on process capacity (set-up is not at the bottleneck)
Problem
Act Time in min/part Setup Time in min STEP 1 1 20 STEP 2 2 0 STEP 3 1.5 0
Step 1 is bottleneck
Bottleneck is the resource with the lowest capacity and the highest utilization
Bottleneck is ??
Decision Trees
Used to structure complex decision problems Use expected return criteria Consider probabilities of occurrence of events Use:
chance nodes (denoted by circles ) decision (or choice) nodes (denoted by squares)
A B C
0.5 Medium 50 25 40
Example of a Decision Tree Problem (Continued): Step 1. We start by drawing the three decisions
A B C
Example of Decision Tree Problem (Continued): Step 2. Add our possible states of nature, probabilities, and payoffs
B C
Example of Decision Tree Problem (Continued): Step 3. Determine the expected value of each decision
High demand (0.4) Medium demand (0.5)
$62k
A
EVA=0.4(90)+0.5(50)+0.1(10)=$62k
$62k
A B C
Medium demand (0.5) Low demand (0.1) High demand (0.4) Medium demand (0.5)
$80.5k
$46k
Alternative B generates the greatest expected profit, so our choice is B or to construct a new facility
Problem 2
Owner of a small firm wants to purchase a PC for billing, payroll, client records Need small systems now -larger maybe later Alternatives: Small: No expansion capabilities @ $4000 Small: expansion @6000 Larger system @ $9000 After 3 years small systems can be traded in for a larger one @ $7500 Expanded @ $4000 Future demand is Likelihood of needing larger system later is 0.80 What system should he buy?
Problem 2
9,000 L: .8 S: .2 9,000 9,000 10,000 Large Need large 9,000 Exp 9,200 L: .8 S: .2 10,000 Exp Trade-in 6,000 13,500
11,500
Trade-in
L: .8 S: .2 10,000
11,500
4,000