Operations Management 1 - Bea
Operations Management 1 - Bea
Management 1
INDIRECT RESPONSIBILITIES
1. Technological Innovation
2. Product and service innovation
3. Identify new market trends
4. Intensify Marketing strategies
5. Go Global
Influences of operations on
competitiveness
Product and service design – special characteristics of a product or
service can be a key factor in consumer buying decisions.
Cost – directly affects pricing decisions and profits. Organizations with
higher productivity rates than competitors is an advantage
Location – is important in terms of cost and convenience for customers.
Location near markets can result in lower transportation cost and
quicker delivery times
Quality – refers to materials, workmanship, design and service.
Customers are willing to pay more for a product or service if they
perceive that it has a higher quality than the competitor
Quick response – Quick delivery and quick response to improvement
and customer complaints are an advantage
Influences of operations on competitiveness
Corporate
Provides long-range guidance for the whole organization, often expressed
as a statement of its mission.
Business
Concerned with the products and services that should be offered in the
market defined at the corporate level
Functional (Operational)
Functions of the business make long-range plans that support the
competitive advantage being pursued by the business strategy
Strategic management process
Refers to the process of choosing the most appropriate course of action for
the realization of organizational goals and objectives and thereby
achieving the organizational vision,
Steps in strategy formulation
1. Setting organizations objectives – What do you want to achieve
2. Evaluating the organizational environment – evaluate the general
economic and industrial environment in which the organization operates,
make sure that the factors important for competitive success in the market
can be discovered so that the management can identify their own and
competitors strengths and weaknesses
3. Setting quantitative targets – compare with long term customers, so as to
evaluate the contribution that might be made by various product zones or
operating departments
4. Aiming context with the divisional plans- contributions mad by each
departments or division or product category within the organization is
identified and accordingly strategic planning is done for each unit.
5. Performance analysis – discovering and analysing the gap between the
planned or desired performance
6. Choice of strategy – the best course of action is chosen
Operations strategy Formulation
Steps
1. Define corporate objectives
2. Determine marketing strategies to meet these objectives
3. Assess how different products win order against
competitors
4. Establish the most appropriate mode to deliver these sets of
products
5. Provide the infrastructure required to support operations
Strategy Implementation
Market-Based Approach
Based on decisions regarding markets and the customers within those
markets that the organization intends to target.
Along with meeting customer needs within the market the position the
organization takes in that market will in part depend on the actions of its
competitors. Thus the organization’s market position is one in which its
performance enables it to attract customers to its products or services in a
more successful manner than its competitors.
Operations Strategy Approaches
Resource-Based Approach
Based on an assessment of the operation’s resources and processes.
Works inside-out of the firm
Transforming resources are the facilities and staff that do the work on the
transformed resources that deliver the goods or services to the customer.
Operations strategy Formulation
Steps
1. Define corporate objectives
2. Determine marketing strategies to meet these objectives
3. Assess how different products win order against competitors
4. Establish the most appropriate mode to deliver these sets of products
5. Provide the infrastructure required to support operations
Corporate objectives – provides directions for the organization, and
performance indicators, which allow progress in achieving those objectives
to be measured.
Marketing Strategy - Identifying target markets and deciding how to
compete in these markets
How do you qualify and win orders in the marketplace? – This step provides
a link between corporate marketing proposals and the operations
processes and infrastructure necessary to support them. Translating the
marketing strategy into range of competitive factors on which the product
or service wins orders.
Delivery System Choice and Infrastructure – Involves putting the processes
and resources in place that provide the required performance as defined
by the performance objectives.
Delivery system choice concerns aspects of the organization’s physical
resources such as service delivery systems and capacity provision. This
includes the choice of process type implemented in manufacturing
(project, jobbing, batch, line or continuous) or services (Professional, shop,
mass)
infrastructural decisions- describe the systems, policies and practices that
determine how structural elements covered in step 4 are managed.
Strategy Implementation
Techniques
1. Balanced scorecards
Aggregate Project Plan
Supply Chain Management
Concerns the process of trying to manage this entire chain from initial
receipt of the ultimate consumer’s order all the way back to the consumer.
Supply Chain