Operations MGMT Lecture Note (Chapter 2) MLT
Operations MGMT Lecture Note (Chapter 2) MLT
11/07/22 1
Chapter 2
OPERATIONS STRATEGY, COMPETITIVENESS & Productivity
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2.1. Introduction to operations strategy
Today’s successful operations managers need to have a global view of
operations strategy. Sellers and consumers, directly or indirectly, are all players
on the global economic stage. Technology, reliable shipping, and inexpensive
communication relax barriers of global transactions and promote competitions.
These advancements mean that, increasingly, firms find their customers and
suppliers are integrated globally. The result of such advancements is the growth
of world trade, global capital markets, the international movement of people, and
most importantly, competition. This means increasing economic integration and
interdependence of countries and firms—globalization. In response,
organizations are hastily expanding their distribution channels and supply
chains globally. The result is innovative strategies where firms compete not just
with their own expertise but with the talent in the global supply chain.
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Business: Mission
Produce and deliver distinctive and quality goods and
services to meet customer expectations
Competitiveness
relates to the
Strategy
effectiveness
relates to the course of
of an organization in the
actions/means that
marketplace relative to
determine how an
other
organization pursues
organizations that offer
its goals
similar products or
services
Productivity relates to
the effective use of
resources, and
it has a direct impact on
competitiveness
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Let’s start with Competitiveness
Companies must be competitive to sell their goods and services in the marketplace.
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Operations has a major influence on competitiveness through interrelated factors that
include product and service design, cost, location, quality, response time, flexibility,
inventory and supply chain management, and service.
Product and service design should reflect joint efforts of many areas of the firm to achieve a match
between financial resources, operations capabilities, supply chain capabilities, and consumer wants and
needs. Special characteristics or features of a product or service can be a key factor in consumer buying
decisions.
Cost of an organization’s output is a key variable that affects pricing decisions and profits. Cost-
reduction efforts are generally ongoing in business organizations.
Productivity is an important determinant of cost/efficiency
Location can be important in terms of cost and convenience for customers. Location near inputs can
result in lower input costs. Location near markets can result in lower transportation costs and quicker
delivery times.
Quality refers to materials, design, and service. Consumers judge quality in terms of how well they
think a product or service will satisfy its intended purpose. Customers are generally willing to pay more
for a product or service if they perceive the product or service has a higher quality than that of a
competitor.
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Proactive (Quick) response can be a competitive advantage. One way is quickly bringing new or improved
products or services to the market. Another is being able to quickly deliver existing products and services to a
customer after they are ordered, and still another is quickly handling customer complaints.
Flexibility is the ability to respond to changes. Changes might relate to alterations in design features of a
product or service, or to the volume demanded by customers, or the mix of products or services offered by an
organization. High flexibility can be a competitive advantage in a changeable environment.
Inventory management can be a competitive advantage by effectively matching supplies of goods with
demand.
Supply chain management involves coordinating internal and external operations (buyers and suppliers) to
achieve timely and cost-effective delivery of goods.
Service might involve after-sale activities customers perceive as value-added, such as delivery, setup,
warranty work, and technical support. Service quality can be a key differentiator; and it is one that is often
sustainable.
Managers and workers are the people at the heart and soul of an organization, and if they are competent and
motivated, they can provide a distinct competitive edge by their skills and the ideas they create.
Understanding competitive issues can help managers develop successful strategies.
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Why do some organizations succeed while others fail?
(let’s Discuss)
Mission: Goals:
The reason for the existence Provide detail and scope of
of an organization. the mission.
Strategies:
Plans/course of actions for
achieving organizational goals.
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An effective operations management effort must have a mission so it knows where it is going and a strategy so
it knows how to get there.
The mission of a business entity, expressed in its mission statement, answers ‘what business it is in’.
Economic success, indeed survival, is the result of identifying missions to satisfy a customer’s needs and
wants. The organization’s mission is defined as its purpose—what it will contribute to society.
Mission statements provide boundaries and focus for organizations and the concept around which the firm can
rally. It also serves as the basis for organizational goals.
The mission states the rationale for the organization’s existence.
Once an organization’s mission has been decided; each functional area (marketing, finance/accounting, and
production/operations) within the firm determines its supporting mission to achieve the firm’s overall mission.
If the mission statement is clearly and well defined, it becomes easy for an organization to develop its
strategy.
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With the mission established, strategy and its implementation can begin. Strategy is
an organization’s action plan to achieve the mission.
Organizational strategy is important to guide the organization by providing direction
for, and alignment of, the goals and strategies of the functional units. Strategies can be
the main reason for the success or failure of an organization.
Each functional area has a strategy for achieving its mission and for helping the
organization reach the overall mission. The strategies exploit opportunities and
strengths, neutralize threats, and avoid weaknesses.
Firms achieve missions in three conceptual strategies:
Differentiation: relates to product or service features, quality, reputation, or customer
service. This means operations managers are required to deliver goods and services that
are better , or at least different from competitors.
Cost leadership: to providing differentiated (unique) products at lower or affordable
price, internal efficiency (low cost production).
Responsiveness: relates to the ability to proactively respond to changing demand from
customers.
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The combination of the above strategies and translating them into concrete tasks be
accomplished enables a business entity to achieve a competitive advantage.
Competitive advantage implies the creation of a system that has a unique advantage over
competitors. The idea is to create customer value in an efficient and sustainable way.
If objectives/goals are destinations, then strategies are the roadmaps for reaching the
destinations. Strategies provide focus for decision making. Generally, organizations have
overall strategies called strategic/organizational strategies, which relate to the entire
organization. They also have functional strategies, which relate to each of the functional
areas of the organization, which support the overall strategies of the organization.
To accomplish the functional strategies, organizations need to have
Tactics.
Tactics are the methods and actions used to accomplish strategies. They are more
specific than strategies, and they provide guidance and direction for carrying out actual
operations.
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Rahel is a master student at Admas. Her:
Mission: Live a better life
Goal: A good income earning job
Strategy: Attend a productive Master program
Tactic: Identify how to finance the Master program
Operation: Register, attend classes, study teaching materials, books
and support materials, do assignments and presentations, take exams.
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Some examples of strategies an organization might choose from
Low cost: Outsource operations to third-party that have low labor costs.
Scale-based strategies: Use capital-intensive methods to achieve high output
volume and low unit costs.
Specialization: Focus on narrow product lines or limited service to achieve higher
quality.
Newness: Focus on innovation to create new products or services.
Flexible operations: Focus on quick response and/or customization.
High quality: Focus on achieving higher quality than competitors.
Service: Focus on various aspects of service (e.g., empathy, accessibility, reliable).
Sustainability: Focus on environmental-friendly and energy-efficient operations.
To do so, organizations need to possess core competencies (i.e., the special
attributes or abilities that give an organization a competitive edge).
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Strategy Formulation/Development
A key element of both organization strategy and operations strategy is strategy
formulation.
Strategy formulation takes into account the way organizations compete and a
particular organization’s assessment of its environment (opportunities and
threats), and its own strengths and weaknesses - SWOT in order to take advantage
of its core competencies.
Strategy formulation is critical because strategies provide direction for the
organization, so they can play a role in its success or failure.
To formulate an effective strategy, managers must take into account the core
competencies of an organization, and they must scan the environment. The
managers must determine what competitors are doing, or planning to do.
Environmental scanning: is the monitoring of events and trends that present
either threats or opportunities for the organization. Generally these include
competitors’ activities; changing consumer needs; legal, economic, political, and
environmental issues; the potential for new markets; and the like.
Another key factor to consider when developing strategies is technological
change, which can present real opportunities and threats to an organization.
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Technological changes occur in products (high-definition TV, improved
computer chips); in services (faster order processing, faster delivery); and in
processes (computer-assisted processing, flexible manufacturing systems). The
obvious benefit is a competitive edge.
The managers must critically examine factors, which referred to as the SWOT
approach (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats), that could have
either positive or negative effects.
Strengths and weaknesses have an internal focus and are typically evaluated by
operations people. Threats and opportunities have an external focus and are
typically evaluated by marketing people. SWOT is often regarded as the link
between organizational strategy and operations strategy.
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Key success factors (KSFs) are those activities that are necessary for a firm to achieve its goals.
KSFs can be so significant that a firm must get them right to survive.
On the other hand, core competencies are the set of unique skills, talents, and capabilities that
a firm does at a world-class standard; A core competency may be the ability to perform the
KSFs or a combination of KSFs.
The idea is to build KSFs and core competencies that provide a competitive
advantage and support a successful strategy and mission. By identifying and
strengthening key success factors and core competencies can an organization
achieve sustainable competitive advantage.
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Support a Core Competency and Implement Strategy by Identifying and
Executing the Key Success Factors in the Functional Areas
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The vision, mission and strategy of an organization can be transformed
into actions through the Balanced Scorecard (BSC).
Using the BSC approach , managers develop objectives, metrics, and targets for
each objective and initiatives to achieve objectives, and they identify links
among the various (Customer, Financial, Internal business process, and Learning
and growth) perspectives.
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2.2. Operations strategy in Manufacturing
Manufacturing companies are characterized by:
- Producing physical (tangible) products (Goods) that customers can see and touch.
- Manufacturers produce goods for stock, with inventory levels aligned to forecasts of market demand.
- Manufacturers can produce goods without a customer order or forecast of customer demand.
- Manufacturers can automate many of their production processes to reduce their labour requirements,
although some manufacturing organizations are labour intensive.
- Manufacturers must have a physical location for their production and stock holding operations
The operational strategies of manufacturing companies thus need to based on an
integrated framework of:
Facilities: Size, location, focus
Capacity planning: Amount, timing, type
Production technologies and processes: Equipment, automation, flexibility, scale, connectedness
Human resource and management: Policies (wages/salary, security), skill
Information communication: Use and level of investment; parity or differentiation
Supply chain: Logistics, inventory policies, vendor relations, production planning
Business process: Product generation, Order fulfilment, quality and flexibility, customer service and
support
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- Product strategy Competitive priority
- Pricing strategy -Cost
- Distribution strategy -Quality
- Communication/ -Innovativeness
promotion strategy -Flexibility
-Delivery performance
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2.3. Operations strategy in Services
Service firms are characterized by:
Delivery of services (consultancy, training, maintenance, medical treatment, etc.), which are intangible in nature.
Do not hold inventory for further transformation from input to output.
Service firms do not produce a service unless a customer requires it.
A service firm recruits people with specific knowledge and skills in the service disciplines that it offers. Most service
delivery is labour intensive.
Service firms do not, most of the time, require a physical production site. The people creating and delivering the service
can be located anywhere (E.g., a software developer can work from home).
Competitive criteria: In service sector, competitive criteria entail the analysis of how well a service meets the needs
and wants of its intended customers in comparison with competing services.
- Cost
- Design
- Delivery
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2.4. Productivity Measurement
Production vs Productivity
Production is the process of creating, growing, manufacturing, or improving goods and
services. It also refers to the quantity produced. In business and economics, productivity is
used to measure the efficiency or rate of production. It is the amount of output (e.g.
number of goods produced) per unit of input (e.g. labour, equipment, and capital).
Productivity:
Effectiveness of production and operation system may be viewed as the efficiency with
which inputs are converted into outputs.
The conversion efficiency can be gauged by ratio of the output to the inputs and is
commonly known as productivity of the system. Productivity is the ratio of input facilities
to the output of goods and services.
The more efficiently we make this change, the more productive we are and the more value
is added to the good or service provided. The operations manager’s job is to enhance
(improve) this ratio of outputs to inputs.
For an organization, improved productivity means improved efficiency.
This improvement can be achieved in two ways: reducing inputs while keeping output
constant or increasing output while keeping inputs constant. Both represent an improvement
in productivity. In an economic sense, inputs are labour, capital, land, and management,
which are integrated into a production system.
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Why productivity?
Productivity is important because:
It helps to cut down cost per unit and thereby improve the profits (profitability).
Gains from productivity can be transferred to the consumers in the form of lower
priced Products or better quality products (customer satisfaction).
Gains can also be shared with workers or employees by paying them at higher
rate (employee benefits and satisfaction).
Overall productivity reflects the efficiency of production system (resource
optimization).
More output is produced with same or less input.
An increase in productivity is always an opportunity for growth.
Reducing Waste And Environmental Impact
Increased productivity (more efficient) leads to increased competitiveness
Reading assignment:
Factors that affect productivity