Quantitative Analysis For Decision Making: Course Description
Quantitative Analysis For Decision Making: Course Description
Course Description
This course provides the student with the concepts, methods and tools for the application of logical and
quantitative analysis to business decision making and problem solving. It familiarizes the student with a
wide range of software and other classical and contemporary resources related to decision and problem
analysis, including basics of logic and decision making, principles of optimization, probabilistic
distributions, linear programming, simplex, queuing and transportation problems, break even analysis,
inventory management, forecasting and simulation. The course highlights the benefits as well as the limits
of quantitative analysis in a real-world context. This course may be adapted for the graduate and
undergraduate levels.
Materials
Readings, assignments, problems and assessments are integrated into the courseware. Any additional
materials will be assigned by the instructor at the start or during the course.
Assignments will change from time to time as new resources become available, contemporary events have
bearing on the topics, or the social, legal, or economic environments change.
FUNDAMENTALS OF DECISION MAKING AND PROBLEM SOLVING (Module One, 4-6 hours)
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2
VLC Course Descriptions www.VLCglobal.com/support Quantitative Analysis for Decision Making
• Where inventory costs occur and why it is important inventory policy decisions are important
• Economic order quantity (EOQ) model
• Total cost models for specific inventory systems
• Total cost model for how-much-to-order and when-to-order decisions
• Inventory systems involving production lot size, planned shortages, and quantity discounts
• Single-period inventory models
• Quantity and reorder point decisions when demand must be described by a probability distribution
• Lead time demand distributions used to meet acceptable service levels
• Order quantity decisions for periodic review inventory systems
• Where waiting line problems occur and why these problems are important
• Single-channel and multiple-channel waiting lines
• Poisson distribution describes arrivals; exponential distribution describes services times
• Formulas identifying operating characteristics of the following waiting line models:
o Single-channel model with Poisson arrivals and exponential service times
o Multiple-channel model with Poisson arrivals and exponential service times
o Single-channel model with Poisson arrivals and arbitrary service times
o Multiple-channel model with Poisson arrivals, arbitrary service times, and no waiting
o Single-channel model with Poisson arrivals, exponential service times, and a finite calling
population
• Economic considerations in decisions concerning the operation of a waiting line
• Readings and Resources
• Why forecasting
• Basic forecasting categories and methods
• Principles and tools for time series methods
• Principles and tools for regression methods
• Markov analysis and other methods
• Simulation as a forecasting method
• Relative advantages and disadvantages of simulation models
• Readings and Resources
• Estimating Total Demand
• Excel Forecasting
• Forecasting Rules
• How To Test Your Decisions
• Vanguard Forecasting Tool
• List of Web Sites to Complement Decision Support Systems: A Knowledge Based Approach
http://www.uky.edu/BusinessEconomics/dssakba/relateds.htm
• Instructional Sites for Decision Support, Expert Systems & Artificial Intelligence, Knowledge
Management, and Other
http://www.uky.edu/BusinessEconomics/dssakba/instmat.htm#Instructional Sites (Software,
Applications, Cases)