Forecasting: Operations Management R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders
Forecasting: Operations Management R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders
Operations Management
by
R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders
2nd Edition © Wiley 2005
Decisions that Need Forecasts
Which markets to pursue?
What products to produce?
How many people to hire?
How many units to purchase?
How many units to produce?
And so on……
Common Characteristics of
Forecasting
Forecasts are rarely perfect
Causal Models:
Explores cause-and-effect relationships
Uses leading indicators to predict the future
E.g. housing starts and appliance sales
Composition
of Time Series Data
Data = historic pattern + random
variation
Historic pattern may include:
Level (long-term average)
Trend
Seasonality
Cycle
Time Series Patterns
Methods of Forecasting the Level
Naïve Forecasting
Simple Mean
Moving Average
Weighted Moving Average
Exponential Smoothing
Time Series Problem
Determine forecast for Period Orders
periods 11 1 122
Naïve forecast 2 91
3 100
Simple average
4 77
3- and 5-period moving 5 115
average 6 58
3-period weighted moving 7 75
average with weights 0.5, 8 128
0.3, and 0.2 9 111
10 88
Exponential smoothing
11
with alpha=0.2 and 0.5
Time Chart of Orders Data
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Naïve Forecasting
Next period forecast = Last Period’s
actual:
Ft 1 At
Simple Average (Mean)
Next period’s forecast = average of all
historical data
At At 1 At 2 .............
Ft 1
n
Moving Average
Next period’s forecast = simple average
of the last N periods
At At 1 ......... At N 1
Ft 1
N
The Effect of the Parameter N
A smaller N makes the forecast more
responsive
A larger N makes the forecast more
stable
Weighted Moving Average
Ft 1 C1 At C2 At 1 ......... C N At N 1
where
C1 C2 .........C N 1
Exponential Smoothing
It is based on the assumption that the most recent
data is better indicator of future trends than past data
Ft 1 At 1 Ft
where
0 1
The Effect of the Parameter
A smaller makes the forecast more
stable
A larger makes the forecast more
responsive
Time Series Problem Solution
11 88 97 109 92 103 99 98
Forecast Accuracy
Forecasts are rarely perfect
Need to know how much we should rely on
our chosen forecasting method
Measuring forecast error:
Et At Ft
Note that over-forecasts = negative errors
and under-forecasts = positive errors
Tracking Forecast Error
Over Time
Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD):
A good measure of the actual error
MAD
actual forecast
in a forecast n
Tracking Signal
Exposes bias (positive or negative) actual - forecast
TS
MAD
Accuracy & Tracking Signal Problem: A company is comparing the
accuracy of two forecasting methods. Forecasts using both methods are
shown below along with the actual values for January through May. The
company also uses a tracking signal with ±4 limits to decide when a
forecast should be reviewed. Which forecasting method is best?
Method A Method B
Month Actual F’cast Error Cum. Tracking F’cast Error Cum. Tracking
sales Signal Error Signal
Error
Jan. 30 28 2 2 2 28 2 2 1
Feb. 26 25 1 3 3 25 1 3 1.5
March 32 32 0 3 3 29 3 6 3
April 29 30 -1 2 2 27 2 8 4
May 31 30 1 3 3 29 2 10 5
MAD 1 2
MSE 1.4 4.4
Adjusting for Seasonality
Calculate the average demand per season
E.g.: average quarterly demand
Calculate a seasonal index for each season of
each year:
Divide the actual demand of each season by the
average demand per season for that year
Average the indexes by season
E.g.: take the average of all Spring indexes, then
of all Summer indexes, ...
Adjusting for Seasonality
Forecast demand for the next year & divide
by the number of seasons
Use regular forecasting method & divide by four
for average quarterly demand
Multiply next year’s average seasonal demand
by each average seasonal index
Result is a forecast of demand for each season of
next year
Seasonality problem: a university wants to develop forecasts for
the next year’s quarterly enrollments. It has collected quarterly
enrollments for the past two years. It has also forecast total
enrollment for next year to be 90,000 students. What is the
forecast for each quarter of next year?
line
b
XY n X Y
X nX
2 2
b
XY n X Y
Sales $ Adv.$ XY X^2 Y^2
X nX 2 2
(Y) (X)
1 130 48 4240 2304 16,900 30282 451.25147.25
b 3.58
2 151 52 7852 2704 22,801 10533 451.25
2