Solution Manual For OM 4 4th Edition by Collier
Solution Manual For OM 4 4th Edition by Collier
com
OM4 Chapter 1: Goods, Services, and Operations Management
Discussion Questions
1.
2. Explain why a bank teller, nurse, or flight attendant must have service management
skills. How do the required skills differ for someone working in a factory? What are the
implications for hiring criteria and training?
Service-providers need technical/operations skills plus human interaction and marketing
skills (i.e., service management skills). A bank teller, for example, must be able to
complete many types of financial transactions and operate the computer and associated
software. The teller must also interact with the customer in a pleasant way and market
other financial services (cross-sell, up sell, etc.). A factory worker can focus on
technical/operations/production skills since they have no or little interaction with
customers. The training for front-room service-providers is more interdisciplinary
compared to backroom factory employees.
Forecasting: Predict the future demand for raw materials, finished goods, and
services.
Supply Chain Management: Manage the flow of materials, information,
people, and money from suppliers to customers.
Facility Layout and Design: Determine the best configuration of machines,
storage, offices, and departments to provide the highest levels of efficiency and
customer satisfaction.
Technology Selection: Use technology to improve productivity and respond
faster to customers.
Quality Management: Ensure that goods, services, and processes will meet
customer expectations and requirements.
Purchasing: Coordinate the acquisition of materials, supplies, and services.
Resource and Capacity Management: Ensure that the right amount of
resources (labor, equipment, materials, and information) is available when they
are needed.
Process Design: Select the right equipment, information, and work methods to
produce high quality goods and services efficiently.
Job Design: Decide the best way to assign people to work tasks and job
responsibilities.
Service Encounter Design: Determine the best types of interactions between
service providers and customers, and how to recover from service upsets.
Scheduling: Determine when resources such as employees and equipment
should be assigned to work.
Sustainability: Decide the best way to manage the risks associated with
products and operations to preserve resources for future generations.
Try to help students identify primary, support, and general management processes in
their example(s). The Human Resource Management functions, for example, are good
situations to discuss support services. Primary processes, for example, are key
4.
Review the box for Pals Sudden Service and find Pals Web site. Based on
this information, describe all the OM activities that occur in a typical day at Pals.
Pals has an interesting Web site (www.palsweb.com) that students would probably
enjoy. The instructor might note that Pals was a recipient of the Baldrige Award and
might briefly discuss what this means as a prelude to further discussion in Chapter 3.
The list would typically include forecasting demand, staff capacity and scheduling,
purchasing, production, assembly, packaging, front office service, cleaning up,
maintenance, quality control, communication and equipment technology, managing
inventories, store location and layout decisions, performance measurement, CBP
definition, operating strategy, etc
Services especially in the front office (at points of contact with the customer) require
different skills than producing physical goods, and therefore, it is difficult for firms to do
both well. Yes, for example, physical inventory can compensate for poor demand
forecast accuracy while service capacity is a surrogate for inventory. Therefore, services
must be better at forecasting and demand/capacity planning than goods-producing firms
or they will miss a sale. Another good contrast is pure production (backroom) skills
versus service management (front room) skills, and how they differ and which is more
difficult for employees to do successfully. All of these differences, issues, and more can
be discussed for each of the four example service organizations.
7. Provide some examples similar to those in Exhibit 1.3, and explain the degree of goods
and services content for these examples.
Students should provide a variety of practical examples. One example is watching a
sporting event on television; this is close to a pure service with no goods content but
very high service and entertainment content. If you actually go to the game then the
ticket, team program, and stadium food represent peripheral goods and more total goods
content. Get the students participating use their examples to illustrate key OM
concepts. Help them see OM in their examples.
8. Draw the customer benefit package (CBP) for one of the items in the following list and
explain how your CBP provides value to the customer. Make a list of a few example
processes that you think would be necessary to create and deliver each good or service
in the CBP you selected and briefly describe issues that must be considered in designing
these processes.
a trip to Disney World
a fast-food restaurant
a wireless mobile telephone
Example Economics
How goods and services are bundled together (i.e., the customer
benefit package) to create value.
(2)
What primary, support and management processes might be needed to
create and deliver each good or service.
(3)
What might be the focus of OM topics as shown in Exhibit 1.1 to the
application of Zappos business such as technology, physical goods and service quality,
inventory and warehousing, process design, and service encounter design.
You might also want to put up the Zappos web page during the classroom discussion and
browse through it pointing out OM related issues and topics. The case is an introductory
case so the discussion should focus on what the student might know from reading Chapter 1
only. Therefore, keep things simple, focus on (a) goods and services and their
differences, (b) three types of processes, (c) OM activities like forecasting, and
scheduling, and (d) Zappos requires BOTH goods and services (a CBP) to be a viable
business (and the processes to create and deliver all).
Make use of Exhibits 1.1 and the box What Do Operations managers Do? Students in
your class will almost always have ordered something from Zappos so let them tell their
story to begin class. Also, the quote that follows from the case highlights the importance of
the service center, service encounters, and customer service. Amazon has recently acquired
Zappos.
Over 95 percent of Zappos transactions take place over the
Web, so each actual customer phone call is a special
opportunity. They may only call once in their life, but that is
our chance to wow them, Hsieh says.
Sometime during the class point out that the CEO, Jeffrey Bezos, wants to establish an
emotional connection will all Zappos customers.
Case Questions for Discussion
1.
Draw and describe the customer benefit package that Zappos provides.
Identify and describe one primary value creation, one support, and one general
management process you might encounter at Zappos.
Students may draw something like below but expect them to not be clear on what is a
good versus a service so if you grade this be open-minded. Go over the definitions of
goods and services in Section 3 of Chapter 1 as you discuss the case. Remember
information of any type is a service so a call center interacts with customers and
exchanges information, the Web site and pages itself are information-intensive and
Support Processes
Training, hire,
medical, salary,
child care
Also, you will have to help them with issues such as what processes create the OM
capability to provide free shipping in both directions. For example, primary processes
(see Exhibit 1.4) might be order entry, warehousing and order picking, outbound
shipping, purchasing, and return shipping and receiving. Support processes might
include salary payments, dental insurance, job training, and day care services for
employees provided by other functional areas. General management processes might
be the VP of Human Resource management who oversees all HRM functions and
processes. Other integrative management processes include VP Customer Service and
Call Centers, VP of Shipping, VP of Marketing, Warehouse Manager, VP of Information
Systems, etc. These three headings on the board help students see that processes are
creating value for customers.
Peripheral Goods
Peripheral Service
Packaging
Free shipping in
both directions
Primary Goods
Shoes, handbags,
sunglasses, etc.
Peripheral Service
Information
Services & Web
Design
Peripheral Service
Call Center
3.
Describe how any three of the OM activities in the box What do Operations
Managers Do? impacts the management of both the goods that Zappos sells and the
services that it provides.
Students might build a table somewhat like Exhibit 1.1 but at this early point in the
course it will not be too detail. Below are some ideas for the table.
OM Activity
Forecasting
Forecasting
Facility Location
Good or Service
Goods demand for a multitude of physical goods,
many of which are fashion items
Services call center volume by hour of the day
(illustrates customer participation and difficulty
predicting service demand see Section 3)
Goods warehouses
You can also query the students on whether Zappos has initiatives on sustainability such
as reducing their carbon footprint, green supply chains, remanufacturing, global
sourcing, and so on. What is their sustainability responsibility if they outsource?
4. Explain how this case illustrates each of the seven major differences between good-s
producing and service providing businesses.
Differences Between Goods and Services
1. Goods are tangible while services are intangible. (Does Zappos manufacture
shoes? No. The CEO says Deliver WOW through service. And They may only
call once in their life, but that is our chance to wow them. Zappos has a dual CBP
with goods and services of roughly equal importance. That is, what does the
customer buy? A bundle of goods and services.)
2. Customers participate in many service processes, activities, and transactions.
(order entry, returns, calls to the call centerall create more uncertainty in delivery
process).
Zappos initiated a trend among on-line retailers with FREE inbound and return
shipments. L.L. Bean, for example, announced in 2011 that it would provide free
shipping both ways. Why? Three-quarters of customers say that they will abandon their
purchase when they cant get free shipping (according to market research)!
You can end by saying something like (a) OM provides the core capabilities for this
on-line retailer that provides both goods and services. For example, great customer
service is only as good as supply chain and process capabilities; (b) the call center is
the gateway to Zappos business. You can also cite Zappos growth, sales, and profit
information to close things out. To-date, Zappos is a successful on-line retailer.