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

Operations Management Stevenson 12th Edition Test Bank

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
494 views

Operations Management Stevenson 12th Edition Test Bank

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

Operations management stevenson 12th edition test bank

Operations management stevenson 12th edition test bank pdf.

Operations Management, 12e William J. Stevenson test bank Table of Content Chapter 1: Introduction to Operations Management Chapter 2: Competitiveness, Strategy, and Productivity Chapter 3: Forecasting Chapter 4: Product and Service Design SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 4: Reliability Chapter 5: Strategic Capacity Planning for Products and
Services SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 5: Decision Theory Chapter 6: Process Selection and Facility Layout Chapter 7: Work Design and Measurement SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 7: Learning Curves Chapter 8: Location Planning and Analysis SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 8: The Transportation Model (Web only) Chapter 9: Management of Quality
Chapter 10: Quality Control SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 10: Acceptance Sampling (Web only) Chapter 11: Aggregate Planning and Master Scheduling Chapter 12: MRP and ERP Chapter 13: Inventory Management Chapter 14: JIT and Lean Operations SUPPLEMENT TO CHAPTER 14: Maintenance Chapter 15: Supply Chain Management Chapter 16:
Scheduling Chapter 17: Project Management Chapter 18: Management of Waiting Lines Chapter 19: Linear Programming Buy Test Bank Solution Manual © 2023 1-1 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Operations Management Stevenson 12th Edition Test Bank full chapter at: � Chapter 01 Introduction to Operations Management True / False Questions 1. Operations managers are responsible for assessing consumer wants and needs and selling and promoting the organization's goods or services. True False 2. Often, the collective success or failure
of companies' operations functions will impact the ability of a nation to compete with other nations. True False 3. Companies are either producing goods or delivering services. This means that only one of the two types of operations management strategies are used. True False 4. Operations, marketing, and finance function independently of each other
in most organizations. True False 5. The greater the degree of customer involvement, the more challenging the design and management of operations. True False 6. Goods-producing organizations are not involved in service activities. True False 7. Service operations require additional inventory because of the unpredictability of consumer demand.
True False 1-2 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. 8. The value of outputs is measured by the prices customers are willing to pay for goods or services. True False 9. The use of models will guarantee the best possible decisions.
True False 10. People who work in the field of operations should have skills that include both knowledge and people skills. True False 11. Assembly lines achieved productivity but at the expense of standard of living.

True False 12. The operations manager has primary responsibility for making operations system design decisions, such as system capacity and location of facilities. True False 13. The word "technology" is used only to refer to "information technology." True False 14. "Value added" by definition is always a positive number since "added" implies
increases. True False 15. Service often requires greater labor content, whereas manufacturing is more capital intensive.
True False 16. Measurement of productivity in service is more straightforward than in manufacturing since it is not necessary to take into account the cost of materials. True False 17.

Special-purpose technology is a common way of offering increased customization in manufacturing or services without taking on additional labor costs. True False 18. One concern in the design of production systems is the degree of standardization. True False 19. Most people encounter operations only in profit-making organizations. True False 20.
Service involves a much higher degree of customer contact than manufacturing. True False 1-3 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. 21. A systems approach emphasizes interrelationships among subsystems, but its main theme is
that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts. True False 22. The Pareto phenomenon is one of the most important and pervasive concepts that can be applied at all levels of management. True False 23. Operations managers, who usually use quantitative approaches, are not really concerned with ethical decision making. True False 24.
The optimal solutions produced by quantitative techniques should always be evaluated in terms of the larger framework. True False 25. Managers should most often rely on quantitative techniques for important decisions since quantitative approaches result in more accurate decisions.
True False 26. Many operations management decisions can be described as trade-offs. True False 27. A systems approach means that we concentrate on efficiency within a subsystem and thereby assure overall efficiency. True False 28.

Prior to the Industrial Revolution, goods were produced primarily by craftsmen or their apprentices using custom-made parts. True False 29.

Elton Mayo's Hawthorne experiments were the focal point of the human relations movement, which emphasized the importance of the human element in job design. True False 30. Among Ford's many contributions was the introduction of mass production, using the concepts of interchangeable parts and division of labor. True False 31. Operations
management and marketing are the two functional areas that exist to support activities in other functions such as accounting, finance, IT, and human resources. True False Test Bank for Organic Chemistry 2nd Edition by Klein January 10, 2018

You might also like