Production/ Operations Management: Estrella Y. Yu, DBM
Production/ Operations Management: Estrella Y. Yu, DBM
Operations Management
Operations management
(OM) is the set of
activities that creates
value in the form of
goods and services by
transforming inputs into
outputs.
Operations Management
Involves :
◦ Planning
◦ Organizing
◦ Supervising processes
to make necessary
improvement for higher
profitability .
Operations Management
The ideal
situation for
business
organization is to
achieve a match of
supply and
demand.
Reasons to understand OM
1. core of all business organizations
2. 50% or more of all jobs are in OM
3. Activities in all other areas of business
organizations are all interrelated with OM
4. To know how goods and services are
produced.
5. To understand what operations managers
do.
Functions of business organization
three basic functions of business
organization
Organization
Operations
Finance
Marketing
Information Flows
To & From Operations
Operations Interfaces
Industrial
Engineering
Distribution
Maintenance
Purchasing
Operations Public
Relation
Legal
Personnel
Accounting
MIS
Finance
Functions:
Securing resources
Allocating resources
Activities: (finance & operations)
Budgeting
Economic analysis of investment
Provision of funds
Marketing
Functions:
Selling & promoting the goods/service
Assess customer wants and needs
Feeds information about demand
Transformation Outputs
Inputs
Process
Tangible Act
Production of Goods vs. Delivery of Services
Models
Quantitative approaches
Analysis of trade-offs
Systems approach
Models
– Physical
– Schematic
– Mathematical
Linear programming
Queuing Techniques
Inventory models
Project models [PERT/CPM]
Statistical models
Linear programming
Linear programming -
is a method to achieve
the best outcome (such
as maximum profit or
lowest cost) in a
mathematical model
whose requirements are
represented
by linear relationships.
Queuing techniques
Queuing techniques are
systems put in place to
serve customers in an
orderly manner.
Queuing techniques
prevent chaos in
customer service by
ensuring the company
can serve one at a time,
on an equitable basis.
Inventory models
inventory model is a
mathematical model that FixedReorder
helps business in Quantity System
determining the optimum
level of inventories that
Fixed Reorder
should be maintained in a
production process, Period System.
managing frequency of
ordering, deciding on
quantity of goods or raw
materials to be stored,
tracking flow of supply of
raw materials and goods to
provide ...
Project models
Analysis of Tradeoff
Tradeoffs
Systems Approach
Suboptimization
Pareto Phenomenon
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Industrial Revolution
James Watt introduced engine
Adam Smith introduced the economic
benefit of division of labor
◦ Breaking up of production process into small
tasks
◦ Specialization of labor
Eli Whitney
◦ Concept of interchangeable parts
Scientific Management
Early 1900s
Separated ‘planning’ from ‘doing’
Management’s job was to discover
worker’s physical limits through
measurement, analysis & observation
Major contributors:
◦ Fredrick Taylor: stopwatch time studies
◦ Henry Ford: moving assembly line
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Scientific Management
Brought the changes to the management of
factories.
Frederick W. Taylor – “father of scientific
management”
◦ Work method
◦ Management is responsible for planning,
selecting and training of workers
◦ Management activities separate from work
activities
Scientific Management
Harrington Emerson
◦ Encourage the use of experts to
improve organizational efficiency
Henry Ford
◦ Introduced mass production
◦ Moving assembly line to the
automobile industry
Human Relations Movement
1930s to 1960s
Recognition that factors other than money
contribute to worker productivity
Major contributions:
◦ Understanding of the Hawthorn effect:
Study of Western Electric plant in Hawthorn, Illinois intended to
study impact of environmental factors (light & heat) on
productivity, but found workers responded to management’s
attention regardless of environmental changes
◦ Job enlargement
◦ Job enrichment
Management Science
Mid-1900s
Developed new quantitative techniques
for common OM problems:
◦ Major contributions include: inventory
modeling, linear programming, project
management, forecasting, statistical sampling,
& quality control techniques
◦ Played a large role in supporting American
military operations during World War II
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Computer Age
1970s
Provided the tool necessary to support the
widespread use of Management Science’s
quantitative techniques – the ability to process
huge amounts of data quickly & relatively
cheaply
Major contributions include the development of
Material Requirements Planning (MRP) systems
for production control
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Developments: 1980s
Japanese Influence
Just-In-Time (JIT):
◦ Techniques designed to achieve high-volume production
using coordinated material flows, continuous
improvement, & elimination of waste
Total Quality Management (TQM):
◦ Techniques designed to achieve high levels of product
quality through shared responsibility & by eliminating the
root causes of product defects
Business Process Reengineering:
◦ ‘Clean sheet’ redesign of work processes to increase
efficiency, improve quality & reduce costs
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Developments: 1990s
Flexibility:
◦ Offer a greater variety of product choices on a mass
scale (mass customization)
Time-based competition:
◦ Developing new product designs & delivering
customer orders more quickly than competitors
Supply Chain Management
◦ Cooperating with suppliers & customers to reduce
overall costs of the supply chain & increase
responsiveness to customers
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Developments: 1990s
Global competition:
◦ International trade agreements open new markets for
expansion & lower barriers to the entry of foreign competitors
(e.g.: NAFTA & GATT)
◦ Creates the need for decision-making tools for facility
location, compliance with with local regulations, tailoring
product offerings to local tastes, managing distribution
networks, …
Environmental issues:
◦ Pressure from consumers & regulators to reduce, reuse &
recycle solid wastes & discharges to air & water
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Electronic Commerce
Internet
& related technologies enable new
methods of business transactions:
◦ E-tailing creates a new outlet for retail goods &
services with global access and 24-7 availability
◦ Internet provides a cheap network for coordinating
supply chain management information
Developing influence of broadband & wireless
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Trends in Business
Major trends
◦ The Internet, e-commerce, e-business
◦ Management technology
◦ Globalization
◦ Management of supply chains
◦ Agility
Other important Trends
Ethicalbehavior
Operations strategy
Working with fewer resources
Cost control and productivity
Quality and process improvement
Increased regulation and product liability
Lean production