Process Analysis Part 2
Process Analysis Part 2
2 25 Cycle
Activity A Activity B time
10 minutes 5 minutes 3 35
4 45
Resource X Resource Y
2 27 Cycle
Activity A Activity B
time
Input is only 10 minutes 5 minutes
3 39
5 units/hour =
1 unit/12 min Resource X Resource Y 4 51
3-1
Chapter Learning Objectives
3-2
Process Analysis/Process Flow Diagram
• Process Analysis – a rigorous framework for understanding the
detailed operations of a business. Among other things, process
analysis determines process capacity (units processed per unit time)
and utilization (how busy resources are)
3-5
Alternative Process
Flow Diagrams
3-6
Check Your Understanding
Airport security consists of the following steps
1. Verify ID and boarding pass by an officer
2. Searching the passenger for metal objects (Individual
security scan through a metal detector)
3. Running the carry-on luggage through X-ray machine
There is a long line of passengers before the first step, but
sometimes lines also build up at steps 2 and 3. Step 2 and 3
are parallel; that is customers go through the metal detector
while their luggage is in the X-ray machine. Draw a process
flow diagram of this process.
3-7
Process Flow Diagram for Airport Security
SEARCH THE
PASSENGER
Metal detector
VERIFY ID
Officer
RUN CARRY-
ON LUGGAGE
X-ray machine
Capacity for a One-Step Process
3-8
Capacity for a One-Step Process: Activity Times
3-9
Capacity for a One-Step Process: Typical Processing Times
3-10
Capacity
Resource Capacity – The maximum number of flow units that can
flow through that resource per unit of time. For an employee in a
sandwich shop (mentioned earlier),
3-11
Check Your Understanding
It takes a color printer 10-seconds to print a large poster.
What is the capacity of the printer expressed in posters per
hour?
(hint: how many seconds in an hour?)
3-12
Check Your Understanding
A call center has one operator who answers
incoming calls. It takes the operator 6-minutes to
answer one call. What is the capacity of the call
center expressed in calls per hour?
Flow Rate =
3-17
Check Your Understanding
A primary care doctor has the capacity to see 16
patients per day. The demand rate is, however, only
12 patients per day.
a. What is the flow rate?
b. What is the utilization of the doctor?
c. What is the cycle time, assuming a 10-hour
workday?
3-18
Check Your Understanding
Answer
We compute the flow rate as the minimum of demand
and process capacity:
3-19
Cycle time & Lead time
Don’t confuse the terms cycle time and lead time.
Cycle time – 1/Flow rate.
3-20
How to Analyze a Multistep Process
(Back to Sandwich Example, Demand rate is 100 customers per hour, see page 51 of textbook)
time?
Check Your Understanding
Continued
1/60
3-26
Time to Produce a Certain Quantity
Types of Processes
3-28
Chapter 4
Process Improvement
Operations Management, 1st Edition
Gerard Cachon and Christian Terwiesch
4-1
Learning Objectives
• Compute the costs of direct labor, labor content, idle time,
and average labor utilization
• Compute the takt time of a process and translate this to a
target manpower
• Process Improvement
• Off-loading the bottleneck and balancing the process
• Pros and Cons of Process Specialization
• Financial Impact of Process Improvements
4-2
Measures of Process Efficiency
Obtaining high output at low costs is the key
idea behind efficiency
4-6
Measures of Process Efficiency
Total idle time – The amount of idle time per flow
unit added up across all resources.
Hence, we obtain
Labor content/(Labor content + Total idle time of all labor resources)
= Labor content/Number of employees
Cycle time
Check Your Understanding
Consider the following example of the three-step process.
• The first step takes 20 minutes/unit.
• The second step takes 10 minutes/unit.
• The third step takes 15 minutes/unit.
Answer – First establish that the worker doing the first step is the
bottleneck (20 minutes). It has the lowest capacity. Then process
capacity is 1/20 unit/minute and cycle time is
1/Flow rate = 20minutes/unit
Idle Time (Stn 1) = 20 – 20 = 0 min/unit
Idle Time (Stn 2) = 20 – 10 = 10 min/unit
Idle Time (Stn 3) = 20 – 15 = 5 min/unit
Total Idle Time = 15 min/unit
Activity A Activity B
10 minutes 5 minutes
Resource X Resource Y
4-11
Takt Time
Takt time – The ratio between the time available
and the quantity that has to be produced to serve
demand .
• Measure driven by demand.
• Goal to design a process flow that meets the demand rate.
• Process should not operate at the discretionary flow of
resources.
• Should happen at the rate of demand.
More demand means a shorter takt time – shorter takt time 4-14
requires more employees to handle the same amount of
labor content.
Staffing Process Improvement
4-15
Off-Loading Bottleneck
4-16
How to Balance a Process
4-17
How to Balance a Process
Figure 4.5
4-18
Pros and Cons of Specialization
Pros
• Reduction in processing times due to elimination of
setups
• Reduction in processing times due to learning
• Lower skilled labor
• Reduced Equipment replication
Cons
• Increased idle time
• Worker Boredom
4-19
Financial Impact of Process
Improvements: Table 4.1
4-20
Financial Impact of Process
Improvements: Table 4.2
4-21
Week 2 Learning objectives
• Determine the capacity for a one-step process.
• Determine the flow rate, the utilization and the cycle time
of a process.
• Find the bottleneck of a multistep process and determine
its capacity.
• Compute the costs of direct labor, labor content, idle
time, and average labor utilization
• Compute the takt time of a process and translate this to a
target manpower
• Process Improvement
• Off-loading the bottleneck and balancing the process
• Pros and Cons of Process Specialization
• Financial Impact of Process Improvements 4-22