Introduction To Operation Management
Introduction To Operation Management
Lecture 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
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Topic Production Operations System Forecasting (Quantitative & Qualitative) Capacity Planning Location and Facility Layout Planning Work Design and Measurement Management of Quality Midterm Operations Scheduling (PERT/CPM) Inventory Control Materials Requirement Planning Just-in-time & Lean Management Supply Chain Management Scheduling Final
Quiz
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Operations Management is an area of management concerned with overseeing, designing, and controlling the process of production and redesigning business operations in the production of goods and/or services. Operations Management is the set of activities that creates goods and services by transforming inputs into outputs
Focuses on carefully managing the processes to produce and distribute products and services.
Outputs (goods and services)
Operations Management
Cross-Functional Applications
OM is one of three major functions (marketing, finance, and operations) of an organization OM often includes substantial measurement and analysis of internal processes, because a great deal of focus is on efficiency and effectiveness of processes. Ultimately, the nature of how operations management is carried out in an organization depends very much on the nature of products or services in the organization.
Historical Development of OM
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Prior to 1900
Cottage
industry produced custom-made goods. Watts steam engine in 1785. Whitneys standardized gun parts in 1801. Industrial Revolution began at mid-century.
approach to increasing worker productivity through time study, standardization of work, and incentives. Viewed workers as an interchangeable asset.
Henry
L. Gantt
the Gantt chart
Scheduling and
Hawthorne Studies
Yielded
unexpected results in the productivity of Western Electric plant workers after changes in their production environment. Led to recognition of the importance of work design and employee motivation.
of WWII needs for logistics control and weapons-systems design. Seeks to obtain mathematically optimal (quantitative) solutions to complex problems.
OM Emerges as a Field
19501960, OM
moved beyond industrial engineering and operations research to the view of the production operation as a system.
OM Emerges as a Field
19501960, OM
moved beyond industrial engineering and operations research to the view of the production operation as a system.
solutions approaches
concepts can apply to both manufacturing and service operations. world class operations requires compatible manufacturing and service operations.
Managerial Issues
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higher quality products Delivering better customer service Achieving shorter delivery times Reducing labor and material costs
(long-range)
Needs of customers
(capacity planning)
Tactical
(medium-range)
Efficient scheduling of
resources
Operational
activities
An Operational-Level OM Perspective
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OMs function focuses on adding value through the transformation process (technical core) of converting inputs into outputs.
Physical:
manufacturing Locational: transportation Exchange:retailing Storage: warehousing Physiological: health care Informational: telecommunications
Factors of Production
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Marketplace
Corporate Strategy
Finance Strategy
Operations Strategy
Marketing Strategy
Operations Management
Plants
Parts
Input
Output
Value Chain
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Conversion/Transformation Process Process primarily adds value to inputs to provide outputs to the customer
Customer Requirements
Output to Customer
Requirements on management
Key OM Concepts
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Effectiveness - Doing the right things to create the most value for the organization
increases quality
and concern for air and water quality design and employee participation
Goods
Tangible Can
Services
Intangible Cannot
Quality is important in all functional areas of an organization. Quality is now much more than the technical requirements for manufactured goods. Service quality (customer relationships) is equally important.
capacity built to support the war effort Pent-up demand for consumer goods Destruction of overseas production capabilities
value to products, increase profit margins. Compete on dimensions other than costs:
Quality Speed of
a global economy Pressure to excel on multiple competitive dimensions Increased emphasis on logistics
Advances in Technology
Information
process was not disturbed by environmental interaction. The process was often more efficient than input and distribution processes. Productivity was maximized when processes operated at continuous rates. Process management skills were different from those of other functional activities.
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activities. Lack of communication between customers and the shop floor for problem solving.
Value Chain
Steps
an organization requires to produce a good or a service regardless of where they are performed.
Planning
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Planning(contd.)
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Effective planning seeks to answer questions such as: What should the firm do? The output of this process are goals and objectives. When must the firm achieve these goals? The output is a schedule defining milestones and due dates. Who is responsible for doing it? The outputs are assigned responsibilities. How should this be done? The outputs may be directions or plans of action. How should performance be measured? The output includes standards of performance.
ANALYSING
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The process of making sense of data that is often: poorly structured, incomplete, inconsistent, inaccurate, and/or available in overwhelming quantities. Analysis supports the planning process by providing the facts in useful formats that can then be used to evaluate business alternatives. Analyzing also supports managements control activity by providing the basis for corrective actions.
ORGANIZING
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The process of building organization structures and interrelated task coordination teams. In the past, organizing dealt mostly with humans, but increasingly it involves data-gathering. A good organizer seeks for
The
right person The right information In the right form At the right time
DIRECTING/IMPLEMENTING
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An action-oriented process that carries out the outputs of the first three management activities. This is where money is made and lost (!). In this process, management expends resources to perform the tasks defined by the planning process.
CONTROLLING
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The process of measuring the results of the other four management activities.
Were
the plans any good? Did the analysis provide meaningful information to the other processes? How well did we organize our resources to get the job done? How well did we do it?
10 CRITICAL DECISIONS
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Service, product design Quality management Process, capacity design Location Layout design Human resources, job design. Supply-chain management Inventory management Scheduling Maintenance
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS
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SECTION OF OM
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from suppliers and vendors - materials, including computers, services from lawyers, insurance, etc.
that organizational goals are consistently being met in an effective and efficient fashion
SECTION OF OM
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management are similar to those in operations management. However, operations management is focused on the operations of the entire organization, rather than managing a product or service.
Quality Management
is crucial to effective operations management,
particularly continuous improvement. More recent advancements in quality, such as benchmarking and Total Quality Management, have resulted in advancements to operations management as well.
SECTION OF OM
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Inventory Management
Costs can be substantial to store and move
inventory. Innovative methods, such as Justin-Time inventory control, can save costs and move products and services to customers more quickly.
from suppliers, through the organization and to the customers, with priority on efficiency and cost effectiveness.
SECTION OF OM
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Facilities Management
Depnds a great deal on effective management of
Configuration Management
It's important to track the various versions of products
and services. Consider the various versions of software that continually are produced, each with its own version number. on the
Distribution Channels
The means of distribution depend very much
Technology/methods Facilities/space utilization Strategic issues Response time People/team development Customer service Quality Cost reduction Inventory reduction Productivity improvement