Operations Management: William J. Stevenson
Operations Management: William J. Stevenson
Operations Management
William J. Stevenson
8th edition
3-2 Forecasting
Forecasting
3-3 Forecasting
FORECAST:
A statement about the future value of a variable of interest such
as demand.
Forecasts affect decisions and activities throughout an
organization
Accounting, finance
Human resources
Marketing
MIS
Operations
Product / service design
3-4 Forecasting
Uses of Forecasts
Timely
Reliable Accurate
l s e
g fu u
i n Written to
n s y
a
M
e Ea
3-8 Forecasting
“The forecast”
Forecasting Methods
Qualitative
use management judgment, expertise, and opinion
to predict future demand
Time series
statistical techniques that use historical demand data
to predict future demand
Regression methods
attempt to develop a mathematical relationship
between demand and factors that cause its behavior
3-10 Forecasting
Judgmental Forecasts
Management, marketing, purchasing, and
engineering are sources for internal qualitative
forecasts
Executive opinions
Sales force opinions
Consumer surveys
Outside opinion
Delphi method
involves soliciting forecasts about technological
advances from experts
3-11 Forecasting
Demand Behaviour
Forecast Variations
Figure 3.1
Irregular
variation
Trend
Cycles
90
89
88
Seasonal variations
3-13 Forecasting
Time Series
Assume that what has occurred in the past will
continue to occur in the future
Relate the forecast to only one factor - time
Include
moving average
exponential smoothing
Naive Forecasts
Naïve Approach
ORDERS
MONTH PER MONTH FORECAST
Jan 120 -
Feb 90 120
Mar 100 90
Apr 75 100
May 110 75
June 50 110
July 75 50
Aug 130 75
Sept 110 130
Oct 90 110
Nov - 90
3-16 Forecasting
Naïve Forecasts
Simple to use
Virtually no cost
Easily understandable
Moving Averages
A i
MAn = i=1
n
3-19 Forecasting
Actual
MA5
47
45
43
41
39
37
MA3
35
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
n
Ai
MAn = i=1
n
3-20 Forecasting
Smoothing Effects
3-23 Forecasting
November Forecast
= 103.4 orders
3-25 Forecasting
Exponential Smoothing
Averaging method
Weights most recent data more strongly
Exponential Smoothing
Exponential Smoothing
PERIOD MONTH
DEMAND
1 Jan 37
2 Feb 40
3 Mar 41
4 Apr 37
5 May 45
What is F13 = ?
6 Jun 50
7 Jul 43
3-29 Forecasting
F2 = 37
PERIOD MONTH
DEMAND F3 = F2 + α(A2 – F2)
1 Jan 37 = 37 + 0.3(40-37)
= 37.9
2 Feb 40
FORECAST, Ft
PERIOD MONTH DEMAND ( = 0.3) ( = 0.5)
1 Jan 37 – –
2 Feb 40 37.00 37.00
3 Mar 41 37.90 38.50
4 Apr 37 38.83 39.75
5 May 45 38.28 38.37
6 Jun 50 40.29 41.68
7 Jul 43 43.20 45.84
8 Aug 47 43.14 44.42
9 Sep 56 44.30 45.71
10 Oct 52 47.81 50.85
11 Nov 55 49.06 51.42
12 Dec 54 50.84 53.21
13 Jan – 51.79 53.61
3-31 Forecasting
Actual
50
.4
.1
45
Demand
40
35
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Period
3-33 Forecasting
Parabolic
Exponential
Growth
3-34 Forecasting
Ft
Ft = a + bt
Calculating a and b
n (ty) - t y
b =
n t 2 - ( t) 2
y - b t
a =
n
3-36 Forecasting
t y
2
W eek t S a le s ty
1 1 150 150
2 4 157 314
3 9 162 486
4 16 166 664
5 25 177 885
2
t = 15 t = 55 y = 812 ty = 2 4 9 9
2
( t) = 2 2 5
3-37 Forecasting
812 - 6.3(15)
a = = 143.5
5
y = 143.5 + 6.3t
3-38 Forecasting
t(PERIOD) y(DEMAND) ty t2
1 73 73 1
2 40 80 4
3 41 123 9
4 37 148 16
5 45 225 25
6 50 300 36
7 43 301 49
8 47 376 64
9 56 504 81
10 52 520 100
11 55 605 121
12 54 648 144
78 557 3867 650
3-39 Forecasting
78
t = = 6.5
12
557
y = = 46.42
12
nty - t y 12(3867)- 78(557)
b = = =1.72
nt – ( t)
2 2
12(650) - (78)2
a = y - bt
= 46.42 - (1.72)(6.5) = 35.2
3-40 Forecasting
Associative Forecasting
X Y Computed
7 15
relationship
2 10
6 13 50
4 15 40
14 25 30
15 27 20
16 24
10
0
12 20 0 5 10 15 20 25
14 27
20 44
15 34
7 17
A straight line is fitted to a set of sample points.
3-42 Forecasting
Standard Error
Standard error of estimate
A measure of the scatter of points around a
regression line
If the standard error is relatively small, the
predictions using the linear equation will tend to be
more accurate than if the standard error is larger
Se
y y c
2
n2
where
Se standard error of estimate
y the value of each data point
n number of data points
3-43 Forecasting
Goodness of Fit
Refers to how well a regression line “fits” the data
Determined by r2=coefficient of determination,
0<r2<1
where
Correlation
The value of r varies between 1.00 and +1.00
A value of +1.00 indicates a strong linear
relationship between the variables
If r = 1.00, then an increase in the independent
variable will result in a corresponding linear
increase in the dependent variable.
r = 1.00 shows an inverse relationship between
the variables
3-45 Forecasting
Issues to Consider
Always plot the line to verify that a linear
relationships is appropriate
The data may be time-dependent.
If they are
use analysis of time series
use time as an independent variable in a multiple
regression analysis
A small correlation may indicate that other
variables are important
3-50 Forecasting
et At Ft
If errors fall beyond acceptable bounds, corrective
action may be necessary
3-54 Forecasting
Misinterpretation of results
3-55 Forecasting
Measurement of Errors
Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD)
Average absolute error
MAD weights all errors evenly
Mean Squared Error (MSE)
Average of squared error
MSE weights errors according to their squared values
Mean Absolute Percent Error (MAPE)
Average absolute percent error
MAPE weights errors according to relative error
3-56 Forecasting
Actual forecast
MAD =
n
2
( Actual forecast)
MSE =
n -1
Example 1
Sum 13 39 11.23%
Example 2
Forecast
Month Demand
Technique1 Technique2
1 492 488 495
2 470 484 482
3 485 480 478
4 493 490 488
5 498 497 492
6 492 493 493
3-59 Forecasting
Example 2
Solution:
Month Technique1 Technique2
e |e| e |e|
1 4 4 -3 3
2 -14 14 -12 12
3 5 5 7 7 e 28
4 3 3 5 5 MAD1 4.67
n 6
5 1 1 6 6 e 34
MAD2 5.67
6 -1 1 -1 1 n 6
∑ -2 28 2 34 Technique 1 is better
3-60 Forecasting
Control chart
A visual tool for monitoring forecast errors
Used to detect non-randomness in errors
Tracking Signal
•Tracking signal
–Ratio of cumulative error to MAD
Tracking signal =
(Actual-forecast)
MAD
Bias – Persistent tendency for forecasts to be
Greater or less than actual values.
3-62 Forecasting
Forecast horizon
3-63 Forecasting
Exponential Smoothing
3-64 Forecasting