Operations Management Notes
Operations Management Notes
Outputs are products and services that add value for customers
Operations can be analysed at three levels
Variety
Low
Flexible
Well defined: how to do a
burger
Complex
Routine
Match customer needs
Regular
High unit costs
Low Unit costs
Variety: How many different products or services we provide.
Variety University: variety of courses of degrees
Low variety: Hult- business degrees
High
Variation in demand
Changing capacity
Anticipation
Flexibility
In touch with demand
High unit costs
Low
Stable
Routine
Predictable
High utilization
Low Unit costs
Visibility
Low
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Qualifying factors: need to reach a level to qualify that level but after
that you have to expend money in other factors. University: Clean
toilet, high speed Internet. Family cars: sound system
Hotel you expected a minimum of cleanness but once you see that a
room is clean you focus in other factors.
Less important factors: Family cars: sunglasses pocket under the seat
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1. People
Customer safety from products and services
Employment impact of an operations location
Employment implications of outsourcing
Repetitive or alienating work
Staff safety and workplace stress
Non-exploitation of developing country suppliers
2. Planet
Recyclability of materials, energy, consumption and waste
material generation.
Reducing transport-related energy
Noise pollution, fume and emission pollution
Obsolescence and wastage
Environmental impact of process failures
Recovery to minimize impact of failures
3. Profit
Cost of producing products and services
Revenue from the effects of quality, speed, dependability, and
flexibility.
Effectiveness of investment in operations resources
Risk and resilience of supply
Building capabilities for the future
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Cost
The cost of producing products and services is obviously influenced
by many factors such as input costs, but two important sets are
The 4 Vs
Variety
Variation
Visibility
Volume
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Aldi: competitive advantage how do they achieve the low cost? Item
they are not out of their boxes, no one have to check if there is
everything place in the right corridor, so they saved money on
replacing food and place it.
Basic lay out, no fancy staff or people-promoting product, No
department to cut the meet or fish
What does cost mean in a Hospital?
Polar diagrams
Are used to indicate the relative importance of each performance
objective to an operation or process. They can also be used to
indicate the difference between different products and services
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produced
by
an
operation
or
process
Speed
Quality
Flexibility: you can stop, ore be late
Cost: taxi more expensive than the bus
Dependability: timetable for the bus, taxi may find one or may not
Polar diagrams for a proposed police performance method
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Trade- offs
Do you want it good, or do you want it Tuesday?
No such things as a free lunch.
McDonalds they scarify the quality in order to achieve the speed
Cost in order to achieve the quality
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Concept generation
Concept screening
Preliminary design
Evaluation and improvement
Prototyping and final design
Concept generation
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Concept screening
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At the beginning the company has different ideas about the concept
and they choose a criteria until they reach the final design
specification. As I move on time I reduce the uncertainly regarding the
final design.
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Professional services:
High levels of customers (client) contact.
Clients spend a considerable time in the service process
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Definitions
Work content: the total amount of work required to produce a unit of
output.
Work in process (WIP): Amount of customers/products in the process
Throughput time (TH): The time for WIP to move through the process
Cycle time (CT): The average times between unit of output emerging
form the process.
Example 1
Need to mark 500 exams scripts in 5 days (working 7 hours a day).
Takes 1 hour to mark a script. How many markers
are needed?
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Work content = 1h
Work in process = 500
Throughput time =35 (5x7)
Cycle time = X
35=(500) CT
CT= 35/500 CT = 0,07
N= WC/CT
N= 1/0,07 = 14,98 = 15
Example 2
Work in process (total work done) =500 Works
Throughput time = 40hours
Work content = 2h/each
40= 500 (CT)
CT= 40/ 500 CT = 0.08
N=2/0.08 = 25
Throughput efficiency is the work content of whatever is being
processed as a percentage of its throughput time.
TE= WC/Throughput time X 100
There will be 530 workstation to renovation will take on average 1,5
hours. How many technicians will be needed to complete the
renovation process within one working week (40 hours)?
WIP= 530
WC= 1,5
TH= 40
40= 530 (CT)
CT=40/530 CT = 0.075
N=1.5/0.075 = 20
TE= (1,5/ 40) 100 = 3,75%
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Inherent safety
Length of flow
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Clarity of flow
Staff conditions
Management coordination
Accessibility
Use of space
Long-term flexibility
Basic layout types have different fixed and variable costs that seem to
determine which one to use
High fix cost: line layout you product
Fix cost: cost independent of the production
Variable cost: correlated with the production
The basic layout types are
Fixed position layout
Functional layout
Cell layout
Line layout
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Fixed layout
The transformed resources do not move between the transforming
resources. Instead of materials, information or customers flowing
through an operation, the recipient of the processing is stationary and
the transforming resources move as necessary.
Functional layout
It conforms to the needs and convenience of the functions performed
by the transforming resources within the process. Similar resources or
process are located together. The combinatorial complexity of
functional layouts makes optimal solutions difficult to achieve in
practice.
Functional layout in a library the path of one customer
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Cell layout
Transformed resources entering the operation are pre-selected (or
pre-selected themselves) to move to one part of the operation (cell) in
which they meet their immediate processing needs.
After being processed in the cell, transformed resources may go on to
another cell. An attempt to bring some order to the complexity of flow
which characterizes functional layout.
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Mixed layouts
Hybrid layouts which combine elements of some or all of the basic
layout types. Use the pure basic layout types in different parts of
the operation.
A restaurant complex with all four basic layout types
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Workplace layout
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Performance objectives
Quality
Speed
Dependability
Flexibility (Agility)
Cost
Plastic home ware manufacturer (company)
First tier suppliers: plastic stockists and packaging supplier they are
the immediately suppliers
Second tier suppliers: Chemical company, cardboard company and ink
supplier
First tier customers: Wholesaler
Second tier customers: Retailers
Company that sells Bottles of water
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Costs
Revenue
Working Capital
Service level (People dont have to wait much time)
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Estimate the current capacity and Forecast demand tell me how much
I can produce for a niche.
Fluctuations on demand
Variation because of seasonality
Aluminium is because of the development of the industry =
Retail store: summer when people are in holidays or leave the city
Good forecast
planning
essential
for
effective
capacity
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Normal distribution
Forecasting demand
Forecasting is the act of predicting likely future levels of demand for
products and services. If future demand can be forecast, decisions
can be made about what levels of capacity to provide. Forecasting
methods can be quantitative or qualitative. The forecasting data will
come from our information and knowledge collection, which may be
primary or secondary.
Forecasting methods
Quantitative methods
1. Time series (analysis extrapolates past demand into the future)
2. Casual analysis (models any cause and effect relationship
between demand data and some other variable)
Qualitative methods
1. Market surveys
2. Delphi studies (expert opinions)
3. Scenario planning (what if)
All methods are inaccurate.
Something very sophisticated: Delphi makes more sense because
they are experts
Something like a phone case: ask people on the street.
If is something simple you wont need to spend much money on
studies.
Capacity timing
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Absorb demand
Part finished
Finished goods or customer inventory
Queues
Backlogs
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Inventory (8)
Inventory or stock is defined as the stored accumulation of resources
in a transformation system. Usually the term refers only to
transformed resources.
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Stage1:
Stage2: Some HD Some 3D
WIP: Send to different countries
Stage 3: Create the labels, instructions for the boxes
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The balance point would be EOQ combination when the total cost is
equal with the order costs.
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Criticisms to EOQ
-
If the true costs of stock holding are taken into account, and if the
cost of ordering (or changeover) is reduced, the economic order
quantity (EOQ) is much smaller.
Exercise
A water distributer sells 300 20l tanks per month (30 days) and
purchase in quantities of 900 per order. The cost accounting
department has analysed inventory costs and has determined that
the cost of placing an order is 20$ and the annual cost of holding one
20l tank inventory is 4$.
Under its current policy of ordering, what is the water distributors
total annual inventory cost?
Annual demand (D)= 300x 12(months) = 3600
Co=20$
TOC (Total ordering cost) = 20x (3600/900)= 20x4=80
Ch=4$
THC (Total holding cost) = 4 x 900/2 = 4 x 450= 1800
TIC = TOC + THC = 80 + 1800 = 1880
(Total costs = Holding costs + Ordering costs)
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ABC Classification
Many managers point out that the Pareto Law is often misquoted. It is
not that 80% of SKUs (Stock keeping units) account for only 20% of
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the value, it is that slow moving items, although only accounting for
20% of sales account for 80% of inventory usage, as they require a
large part of the total investment in stock.
If errors in forecasting or ordering result in excess stock of A class
fast moving items, it is relatively unimportant as the excess stock can
be sold quickly. A items can be left to look after themselves, B and
even more C items need controlling.
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How many cars I produce and how many tyre I need for the car (5)
How many tyres I need depends on the demand.
Tyre fitting service: Independent demand
Demand is not easy to anticipate because maybe you might have to
fix a tyre, replace 3 tyresDemand for tyres is largely governed by
random factors.
Main activities
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You ask me the deadline, never read the syllabus, so the students
start really late. So as a company they have lower material costs and
customer less exposes them to risk in case of schedule change.
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Synonyms
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Waste (muda)
Smalls machines
Conventional Western Approach is to purchase large machines to get
economies of scale. These often have long, complex set-ups, and
make big batches quickly creating waste.
Using several small machines rather than one large one allows
simultaneous processing, is more robust and is more flexible
Flow principle
Batch flow (units processed in batches of 10)
A process consists of 3 steps: A B C
It takes one minute to finish each step of the process (A B C)
We produce 3 colours: Colour A clean Colour B cleans Colour C
Batch Production
It will take 30 min to move through the process.
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The total amount of work required to complete each batch has not
changed, but the throughput time of each batch is reduced from 30 to
12 minutes.
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