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Introduction To Operations and Supply Chain Management

This document provides an overview of operations and supply chain management. It discusses what operations and supply chain managers do, including designing and improving productive systems. It also describes the evolution of operations and supply chain management from craft production to modern concepts like lean production and supply chain management. Finally, it covers strategies for formulating an operations strategy and the importance of productivity and competitiveness on a global scale.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
172 views

Introduction To Operations and Supply Chain Management

This document provides an overview of operations and supply chain management. It discusses what operations and supply chain managers do, including designing and improving productive systems. It also describes the evolution of operations and supply chain management from craft production to modern concepts like lean production and supply chain management. Finally, it covers strategies for formulating an operations strategy and the importance of productivity and competitiveness on a global scale.

Uploaded by

fabyunaaa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 62

Chapter 1

Introduction to Operations and


Supply Chain Management
Operations Management

Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III


Lecture Outline

 What Operations and Supply


Chain Managers Do
 Operations Function
Evolution of Operations and Supply Chain
Management
 Globalization and Competitiveness
 Operations
 Strategy and Organization of the Text
 Learning Objectives for This Course

1-6
What Operations and
Supply Chain Managers
Do
 What is Operations Management?
 design, operation, and improvement of productive
systems

  a function or system that transforms inputs into outputs of


greater value
 What is a Transformation Process?
 a series of activities along a value chain extending
from
supplier to customer
 activities that do not add value are superfluous and
should be eliminated

1-7
Transformation Process

 Physical: as in manufacturing
operations
Locational: as in transportation or
warehouse operations
 Exchange: as in retail operations
 Physiological: as in health care
 Psychological: as in entertainment
 Informational: as in communication
1-8
Operations as a
Transformation Process

INPUT
•Material
TRANSFORMATIO OUTPUT
•Machines
•Goods
•Labor N PROCESS
•Services
•Management
•Capital

Feedback & Requirements

1-9
Operations Function

 Operations
 Marketing
 Finance
and
Accounting
 Human
Resources
 Outside
Suppliers
1-10
How is Operations Relevant to my
Major?
 “As an auditor you must
 Accounting understand the fundamentals of
operations management.”
 Information  “IT is a tool, and there’s no better
Technology place to apply it than in
operations.”
 “We use so many things you
 learn in an operations class—
Management scheduling, lean production,
theory of constraints, and tons of
quality tools.”
1-11
How is Operations Relevant to my
Major? (cont.)
 “It’s all about processes. I live
 by flowcharts and Pareto
Economics analysis.”
 “How can you do a good job
marketing a product if you’re
 Marketing unsure of its quality or delivery
status?”
 “Most of our capital budgeting
requests are from
 Finance operations, and most of our
cost savings, too.”

1-12
Evolution of Operations and
Supply Chain Management
 Craft production
 process of handcrafting products or
services for individual customers
 Division of labor
 dividing a job into a series of small tasks
each performed by a different worker
 Interchangeable parts
 standardization of parts initially as
replacement parts; enabled mass
production

1-13
Evolution of Operations and
Supply Chain Management (cont.)

 Scientific management
 systematic analysis of work methods
 Mass production
 high-volume production of a standardized
product for a mass market
 Lean production
 adaptation of mass production that prizes
quality and flexibility

1-14
Historical Events in
Operations Management
Era Events/Concepts Dates Originator

Steam engine 1769 James Watt


Industrial
Revolution
Division of labor 1776 Adam Smith

Interchangeable parts 1790 Eli Whitney

Principles of scientific 1-15


1911 Frederick W. Taylor
management
Historical Events in
Operations Management
(cont.)
Era Events/Concepts Dates Originator

Hawthorne studies 1930 Elton Mayo

Human 1940s Abraham Maslow


Relations Motivation theories

1950s Frederick Herzberg

1960s Douglas McGregor


1-16
Linear programming 1947 George Dantzig
Historical Events in
Operations Management
(cont.)
Era Events/Concepts Dates Originator

JIT (just-in-time) 1970s Taiichi Ohno (Toyota)

TQM (total quality W. Edwards Deming,


1980s
management) Joseph Juran

Quality Strategy and Wickham Skinner, 1-17


1980s
Revolution operations Robert Hayes
Historical Events in
Operations Management
(cont.)
Era Events/Concepts Dates Originator
Internet Internet, WWW, ERP, 1990s ARPANET, Tim
Berners-Lee SAP,
Revolution supply chain management

i2 Technologies,
ORACLE

1-18

E-commerce 2000s Amazon, Yahoo,


Evolution of Operations and
Supply Chain Management (cont.)
 Supply chain management
 management of the flow of information, products, and services across
a network of customers, enterprises, and supply chain partners

1-19
Globalization
and
Competitiveness
Why “go global”?
 favorable cost
 access to international markets
 response to changes in demand
 reliable sources of supply
 latest trends and technologies
Increased globalization
 results from the Internet and falling trade
barriers

1-20
Globalization and
Competitiveness (cont.)

Hourly Compensation Costs for Production Workers


Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2005.
1-21
Globalization and
Competitiveness (cont.)

World Population Distribution


Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2006.
1-22
Globalization and
Competitiveness (cont.)

Trade in Goods as % of GDP


(sum of merchandise exports and imports divided by GDP, valued in U.S. dollars)
1-23
Productivity and

Competitiveness
 Competitiveness
 degree to which a nation can produce goods
and services that meet the test of international
markets
 Productivity
 ratio of output to input
 Output
 sales made, products produced,
customers served, meals delivered, or
calls answered
 Input
 labor hours, investment in equipment, material
usage, or square footage

1-24
Productivity and
Competitiveness
(cont.)

Measures of Productivity

1-25
Productivity and
Competitiveness (cont.)

Average Annual Growth Rates in Productivity, 1995-2005.


Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. A Chartbook of
International Labor Comparisons. January 2007, p. 28.
1-26
Productivity and
Competitiveness (cont.)

Average Annual Growth Rates in Output and Input, 1995-2005 Dramatic Increase in
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics. A Chartbook of International Output w/ Decrease in
Labor Comparisons, January 2007, p. 26.
Labor Hours
1-27
Productivity and
Competitiveness (cont.)


Retrenching
 productivity is increasing, but both output and input

decrease with input decreasing at a faster rate


 Assumption that more input would
cause
output tolimits
 certain increase
to theat the same
amount ratemay not be
of output
considered
 output produced is emphasized, not output sold;
increased inventories

1-28
Strategy and Operations

 Strategy
 Provides direction for achieving a mission
 Five Steps for Strategy Formulation
 Defining a primary task
 What is the firm in the business of doing?
 Assessing core competencies
 What does the firm do better than anyone else?
 Determining order winners and order qualifiers
 What qualifies an item to be considered for purchase?
 What wins the order?
 Positioning the firm
 How will the firm compete?
 Deploying the strategy

1-29
Strategic Planning
Mission
and Vision

Corporate
Strategy

Marketing Operations Financial


Strategy Strategy
Strategy
1-30
Order Winners
and Order Qualifiers

Source: Adapted from Nigel Slack, Stuart Chambers, Robert Johnston, and
Alan Betts, Operations and Process Management, Prentice Hall, 2006,
p. 47
1-31
Positioning the Firm

 Cost
 Speed
 Quality

Flexibility

1-32
Positioning the Firm:
Cost
 Waste
 relentlessly pursuing the removal of all waste
elimination
 Examination of cost
structure looking at the entire cost structure for
reduction potential
 Lean
 providing low costs through disciplined
production
operations

1-33
Positioning the Firm:
Speed
 fast moves, fast adaptations, tight linkages
 Internet
 conditioned customers to expect immediate responses
 Service organizations
 always competed on speed (McDonald’s, LensCrafters,
and Federal Express)
 Manufacturers
 time-based competition: build-to-order
production and efficient supply chains
 Fashion industry
 two-week design-to-rack lead time of Spanish retailer,
Zara

1-34
Positioning the Firm:
Quality
 Minimizing defect rates or conforming to
design specifications; please the customer
 Ritz-Carlton - one customer at a time
 Service system is designed to “move
heaven and earth” to satisfy customer
 Every employee is empowered to
satisfy a guest’s wish
 Teams at all levels set objectives and
devise quality action plans
 Each hotel has a quality leader

1-35
Positioning the Firm:
Flexibility
 ability to adjust to changes in product
mix,
production volume, or design
 National Bicycle Industrial
offers 11,231,862 variations Company
 delivers within two weeks at costs only 10%
above standard models
 mass customization: the mass production of
customized parts

1-36
Policy Deployment

 Policy deployment
 translates corporate strategy into measurable
objectives
 Hoshins
 action plans generated from the policy
deployment process

1-37
Policy Deployment

Derivation of an Action Plan Using Policy Deployment


1-38
Balanced Scorecard

 Balanced scorecard
 measuring more than financial performance
 finances
 customers
 processes
 learning and growing
 Key performance indicators
 a set of measures that help managers evaluate
performance in critical areas

1-39
Balanced Scorecard
Balanced Scorecard Worksheet

1-40
Balanced Scorecard

Radar Chart Dashboard

1-41
Operations Strategy

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Chapter 1 Supplement

Decision Analysis

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Operations
MMaannaaggeemmeennt
Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III
Lecture Outline

 Decision Analysis
Decision Making without Probabilities
 Decision Analysis with Excel
 Decision Analysis with OM Tools
 Decision Making with Probabilities
 Expected Value of Perfect
Information
 Sequential Decision Tree
Supplement 1-44
Decision Analysis

 Quantitative
methods a set of tools for operations manager
 Decision
analysis  a set of quantitative decision-
making techniques for decision situations
in which uncertainty exists
Example of
 an uncertain situation

 demand for a product may vary between 0 and


200 units, depending on the state of market

Supplement 1-45
Decision Making
Without Probabilities
 States of nature
 Events that may occur in the future
 Examples of states of nature:
 high or low demand for a product
 good or bad economic conditions
 Decision making under risk
 probabilities can be assigned to the occurrence of
states of nature in the future
 Decision making under uncertainty
 probabilities can NOT be assigned to the
occurrence of states of nature in the
future
Supplement 1-46
Payoff Table
 Payoff table
 method for organizing and illustrating payoffs from different
decisions given various states of nature
 Payoff
 outcome of a decision

States Of Nature
Decision a b
1 Payoff 1a Payoff 1b
2 Payoff Payoff
2a 2b
Supplement 1-47
Decision Making Criteria Under
Uncertainty

Maximax
 choose decision with the maximum of the
maximum payoffs
Maximin
 choose decision with the maximum of the
minimum payoffs
Minimax regret
 choose decision with the minimum of the
maximum regrets for each alternative

Supplement 1-48
Decision Making Criteria Under
Uncertainty (cont.)

 Hurwicz
 choose decision in which decision payoffs are
weighted by a coefficient of optimism, alpha
 coefficient of optimism is a measure of a
decision maker’s optimism, from 0 (completely
pessimistic) to 1 (completely optimistic)
 Equal likelihood (La Place)
 choose decision in which each state of nature is
weighted equally

Supplement 1-49
Southern Textile
Company

STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions

Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000


Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000

Sell now 320,000 320,000

Supplement 1-50
Maximax Solution
STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions
Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000
Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000
Sell now 320,000 320,000

Expand: $800,000
Status quo: 1,300,000  Maximum
Sell: 320,000
Decision: Maintain status quo

Supplement 1-51
Maximin Solution
STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions
Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000
Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000
Sell now 320,000 320,000

Expand: $500,000  Maximum


Status quo: -150,000
Sell: 320,000
Decision: Expand

Supplement 1-52
Minimax Regret Solution
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
Competitive Conditions
Competitive Conditions

$1,300,000 - 800,000 = 500,000 $500,000 - 500,000 =


01,300,000 - 1,300,000 = 500,000 - (-150,000)= 650,000
0 1,300,000 - 320,000 = 980,000 500,000 - 320,000=
180,000

Expand: $500,000  Minimum


Status quo: 650,000
Sell: 980,000
Decision: Expand

Supplement 1-53
Hurwicz Criteria
STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions
Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000
Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000
Sell now 320,000 320,000
  = 0.3 1 -  = 0.7

Expand: $800,000(0.3) + 500,000(0.7) = $590,000  Maximum


Status quo: 1,300,000(0.3) -150,000(0.7) = 285,000
Sell: 320,000(0.3) + 320,000(0.7) = 320,000
Decision: Expand

Supplement 1-54
Equal Likelihood Criteria
STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions
Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000
Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000
Sell now 320,000 320,000

Two states of nature each weighted 0.50


Expand: $800,000(0.5) + 500,000(0.5) = $650,000 
Maximum
Status quo: 1,300,000(0.5) -150,000(0.5) = 575,000
Sell: 320,000(0.5) + 320,000(0.5) = 320,000
Decision: Expand
Supplement 1-55
Decision Analysis with
Excel

Supplement 1-56
Decision Analysis with
OM Tools

Supplement 1-57
Decision Making with
Probabilities

 Risk involves assigning probabilities


to
states of nature
 Expected
 value average of decision
a weighted
outcomes in which each future state of
nature is assigned a probability of
occurrence

Supplement 1-58
Expected value

n
EV (x) =
p(xi ) i 
i =1
x
where

xi = outcome i
p(xi) = probability of
outcome i

Supplement 1-59
Decision Making with
Probabilities: Example
STATES OF NATURE
Good Foreign Poor Foreign
DECISION Competitive Conditions Competitive Conditions

Expand $ 800,000 $ 500,000


Maintain status quo 1,300,000 -150,000
Sell now 320,000 320,000
p(good) = 0.70 p(poor) = 0.30
EV(expand): $800,000(0.7) + 500,000(0.3) = $710,000
EV(status quo): 1,300,000(0.7) -150,000(0.3) = 865,000  Maximum
EV(sell): 320,000(0.7) + 320,000(0.3) = 320,000

Decision: Status quo

Supplement 1-60
Decision Making with
Probabilities: Excel

Supplement 1-61
Expected Value of
Perfect Information

EVPI  maximum value of perfect information to
the decision maker
 maximum amount that would be paid to
gain information that would result in a
decision better than the one made
without perfect information

Supplement 1-62
EVPI Example
 Good conditions will exist 70% of the time
 choose maintain status quo with payoff of $1,300,000
 Poor conditions will exist 30% of the time
 choose expand with payoff of $500,000
 Expected value given perfect information
= $1,300,000 (0.70) + 500,000 (0.30)
= $1,060,000
 Recall that expected value without perfect
information was $865,000 (maintain status quo)

EVPI= $1,060,000 - 865,000 = $195,000

Supplement 1-63
Sequential
Decision Trees
 A graphical method for analyzing
decision situations that require a
sequence of decisions over time
 Decision tree consists of
 Square nodes - indicating decision points
 Circles nodes - indicating states of nature
 Arcs - connecting nodes

Supplement 1-64
Evaluations at Nodes

Compute EV at nodes 6 & 7


EV(node 6)= 0.80($3,000,000) + 0.20($700,000) = $2,540,000
EV(node 7)= 0.30($2,300,000) + 0.70($1,000,000)=
$1,390,000
Decision at node 4 is between
$2,540,000 for Expand and
$450,000 for Sell land
Choose Expand
Repeat expected value calculations and decisions at
remaining nodes

Supplement 1-65
Decision Tree Analysis
$1,290,000 $2,000,000
0.60

Market growth
2
0.40 $3,000,000
$2,540,000
$225,000
0.80
6
$700,000
0.20
$1,740,000
1

$1,160,000 4
$450,000

$2,300,000
$1,390,000
0.60
0.30
3 7
0.40 0.70 $1,000,000

$1,360,000
$79
$210,000
0,0
Supplement 1-66
00

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