CPIM - SMR 1, SMR II, SMR III, SMR IV - Global Environment and Sustainability, SMR V - Infrastructure and Financial Measurement, SMR V - Operations Strategy, SMR Final Review, SMR Final Review, APICS - SMR Vocabulary, SMR - Strategic Management of Re...
Global Strategy
"Think global - Act global" - Emphasizes strong branding and consistent competitive strategy (low cost-leadership across multiple markets). Sale of same product in all markets. Strong branding. Same competitive strategy in all markets. Plants and suppliers located where advantageous. Transfer of ideas, tech, capabilities among markets.
Transnational Strategy
"Think global - Act local" - Used when there are benefits to standardization but a need for local responsiveness. May use mass customization to meet local preferences.
Multi-domestic Strategy
"Think local - Act local" - significant cross country differences exist in areas such as customer preferences, physical conditions that require different product performance specifications, and government standards. Products adapted to accommodate local preferences. Plants located in multiple countries & use local suppliers. Wide autonomy for country managers.
Strategic Group
# of companies competing. Each company examined for product range, price / quality, attributes, similar technologies, technical support.
Lead capacity strategy
-) Adding capacity in anticipation of an increase in demand -) An aggressive strategy with the goal of luring customers away from the company's competitors by improving the service level and reducing lead time
Lag capacity strategy
-) Adding capacity only after the organization is running at full capacity or beyond due to increase in demand -) Decreases the risk of waste, but it may result in the loss of possible customers either by stockout or low service levels
Redundancy
1) A backup capability, coming either from extra machines or from extra components within a machine, to reduce the effect of breakdowns. 2) The use of one or more extra or duplicating components in a system or equipment (often to increase reliability).
Product Profiling
1) A graphical device used to ascertain the level of fit between a manufacturing process and the order-winning criteria of its products. Product profiling can be used at the process or company level to compare the manufacturing capabilities with the market requirements to determine areas of mismatch and identify steps needed for realignment. 2) Removing material around a predetermined boundary by means of numerically controlled machining. The numerically controlled tool path is automatically generated on the system.
Prototyping
1) A specialized product design and development process for developing a working model of a product. 2) A specialized system development process for performing a determination where user needs are extracted, presented, and developed by building a working model of the system. Generally, these tools make it possible to create all files and processing programs needed for a business application in a matter of days or hours for evaluation purposes.
Learning Organization
1) Group of people who have woven a continuous, enhanced capacity to learn into the corporate culture. 2) An organization in which learning processes are analyzed, monitored, developed, and aligned with competitive goals.
Cash Conversion Cycle
1) In retailing, the length of time between the sale of products and the cash payments for a company's resources. 2) In manufacturing, the length of time from the purchase of raw materials to the collection of accounts receivable from customers for the sale of products or services.
Operational Performance Measurements
1) In traditional management, performance measurements related to machine, worker, or departmental efficiency or utilization. These performance measurements are usually poorly correlated with organizational performance. 2) In Theory of Constraints, performance measurements that link causally to organizational performance measurements. Throughput, inventory, and operating expense are examples. See: Global Performance Measurements, Local Performance Measurements, Strategic Performance Measurements.
Flexibility
1) The ability of the manufacturing system to respond quickly, in terms of range and time, to external or internal changes. Six different categories can be considered: - Mix flexibility - Design changeover flexibility - Modification flexibility - Volume flexibility - Rerouting flexibility - Material flexibility In addition, flexibility involves concerns of product flexibility. Flexibility can be useful in coping with various types of uncertainty. 2) The ability of a supply chain to mitigate, or neutralize, the risks of demand forecast variability, supply continuity variability, cycle time plus lead time uncertainty, and transit time plus customs clearance time uncertainty during periods of increasing or diminishing volume.
Process Control
1) The function of maintaining a process within a given range of capability by feedback, correction, and so forth. 2) The monitoring of instrumentation attached to equipment (valves, meters, mixers, liquid, temperature, time, etc.) from control room to ensure that a high-quality product is being produced to specification.
Sunk Cost
1) The unrecovered balance of an investment. It is a cost, already paid, that is not relevant to the decision concerning the future that is being made. Capital already invested that for some reason cannot be retrieved. 2) A past cost that has no relevance with respect to future receipts and disbursements of a facility undergoing an economic study. This concept implies that since a past outlay is the same regardless of the alternative selected, it should not influence the choice between alternatives.
Flexibility objective in design process
1. Ability to anticipate and respond to competitors moves 2. Responsiveness to changes in customer requirements, consumer preferences, and technology 3. Ability to bring internally developed technical solution to the markets quickly 4. Support of speed-to-market competitive advantage 5. Ability to adapt the design process to meet local requirement and sustainability goals 6. Impact of excess capacity on design process flexibility 7. External competitive advantage: design flexibility into products
Ratio analysis
1. Ability to pay current liabilities: liquidity ratio: current ratio, quick ratio 2. Ability to sell inventory and collect receivables: activity ratio: inventory turn, A/R turnover, day's sale in account receivable 3. Ability to pay long-term debt: debt ratio: 4. Ability to make profit: profitability: rate of return on asset
Costing management implication
1. Absorption costing provides an incentive to build inventory 2. Absorption costing conflicts with lean and theory of constraint's methodology 3. Performance measures tied to operating income results can create perverse incentives 4. Organization should consider: a) adopting performance incentives based on variable costing b) using a balanced set of performance measures c) placing strictly controls on inventory buildup
Reasons to implement change
1. Achieve competitive advantage 2. Maintain viability over the long term 3. Keep current with constant technological developments 4. Overcome the gap between organizational performance and expectations 5. Address changing regulation
Principles of sustainability
1. Achieving high performance level in the long term 2. Avoiding detrimental behaviors in the short term
Objectives of operations strategy
1. Align operations with business strategy and market requirements 2. Provide vision of an operations strategy 3. Define performance objectives 4. Reconcile strategic decisions to performance objectives
Focused differentiation strategy
1. Apply differentiation strategy to a target market niche 2. The strategy meets unique buyer needs for special products and service attributes or seller capabilities 3. Companies often target customers willing to pay a premium for a product/service
Focused low-cost strategy
1. Apply low-cost strategy to a target maker niche 2. The strategy meets well-defined buyers needs 3. Focus is on lowest overall cost 4. Reconfigure the value chain to reduce costs
Supply Chain Strategy
1. Arm's length and long-term partnership 2. Disintermediation 3. Outsourcing 4. Vertical integration 5. Supplier reduction 6. Bullwhip effect
Profit sanctuaries and cross-market subsidization for gaining competitive advantages
1. Attack a rival's home market: sacrifice profit to weaken rival in home market 2. Selectively attack rivals in different country market to improve market share
3 types of implementation approaches
1. Big Bang Approach: Quickest time to benefit Least amount of human resources Can be traumatic Risks are significant 2. Step Approach: Ideal for large complex projects Allows high degree of focus Lengthens time to benefit Cutover strategy can be complex 3. Parallel: Ideal for small or high risk ventures Safest Requires a large amount of support
Strategic changes in workforce management
1. Build an organization with the resource strengths to execute strategy successfully 2. Marshal money and people to drive strategy execution 3. Institute policies and procedures that facilitate strategy execution 4. Adopt best practices and continually improve value chain activities 5. Install information and operating systems to facilitate strategy execution 6. Tie rewards directly to good strategy execution 7. Instill a corporate culture that promotes strategy execution 8. Exercise strong leadership to drive execution forward
Sustainable Management System Model
1. Business case: perform a cost and benefit analysis 2. Organizational component: get management buy-in 3. Operational component: link to strategic plan, engage stakeholders, train personnel 4. Enterprise resource planning and information technology 5. Monitoring and audits
Basic location factors
1. Capital requirement 2. Cost factors 3. Community factors 4. Flexibility 5. Risk factors
Implement Strategic change
1. Change processes and procedure 2. Change roles and responsibility 3. Change organizational design 4. Change measurement system 5. Educate and train affected individual
Lead culture change
1. Communicate to employees that change is necessary 2. Encourage employees to get involved 3. View the entire suggestions rapidly 4. Break down walls that inhibit communication 5. Give employees a sense of mission 6. Communicate positive and negative business result
Threat of Market Entrants
1. Companies in other industries that use their core competencies to enter other markets. 2. Companies within an industry that enter new market segments or geographical markets in the same industry to increase sales
Arm's length (transaction) relationship strategy
1. Competition among suppliers 2. Independent decision 3. Short-term relationship 4. Advantage: competition leads to low cost and possibly high value 5. Disadvantage: little supplier royalty, high transaction costs
Strategy in rapidly growing phase
1. Competitive strategy and focus: Further differentiation 2. Product strategy: innovation to expand product lines and lower prices 3. Marketing strategy: new geographical markets, brand building 4. Distribution channel: access to new channels 5. Supply Chain: further cost reduction
Strategy in declining phase
1. Competitive strategy and focus: harvest cash flow or sell and invest elsewhere 2. Product strategy: selective innovation and differentiation 3. Marketing strategy: Selective promotions 4. Distribution channel: Further consolidation 5. Supply Chain: intense focus on efficiency, low cost leadership
Strategy in maturing phase
1. Competitive strategy and focus: low-cost leader 2. Product strategy: emphasis on cost and service, product pruning 3. Marketing strategy: expand sales to current customers, international markets, brand promotion 4. Distribution channel: closure of low-volume, high-cost channels 5. Supply Chain: technology and flexibility to lower cost, mergers
Strategy in emerging phase
1. Competitive strategy and focus: low-cost or differentiation 2. Product strategy: perfection of product and technology 3. Marketing strategy: Awareness then brand loyalty 4. Distribution channel: first-mover advantages 5. Supply Chain: partnership to gain resources and expertise
Evaluate competitors
1. Competitor strengths and weaknesses 2. Predict next moves: determine which ones: a) Badly need to increase market share b) Have the need and resources to move to a different position in a cluster c) Are candidates for acquisition d) Are likely to enter new geographic markets e) Are likely to expand product offerings and enter new product segments
Long-term partnership strategy
1. Compromise between vertical integration and transaction relationship 2. Continuing relationship based on mutual advantage and trust 3. Multiple points of contact between organization 4. Advantages: dependability of delivery, quality of materials, joint development
Locations of value chain activities for gaining competitive advantages
1. Concentration in few location a) lower manufacturing costs b) economies of scale c) learning curve effect d) proximity to research and development and supplier infrastructure 2. Dispersing of activities a) fulfill customer expectation: distribution centers, sales and service activities b) to manage business risks: exchange rates, supply, politics, etc...
Quality objective in design process
1. Conformance quality means being free of design errors 2. Specification quality is high when a product competes successfully in the market 3. Techniques such as quality function deployments (QFD) support excellence in specification quality 4. Quality of design output is critical to low-cost provider and differentiation strategy
Deployment issues relating to facilites
1. Consistency with operations performance objectives 2. Number and size of facilities 3. Changes of location 4. timing and scale of capacity changes
Cost objective in design process
1. Costs incurred by the design activities 2. Causes of late completion of design output 3. Financial impacts of late completion
Formative strategy issues
1. Customized vs standardized products 2. Location advantages 3. Economic policies and political climate
Disintermediation strategy
1. Cut out the middle man 2. Bypasses downstream supply chain operations 3. Shorten the supplier chain 4. reduces costs and increase net profits 5. Better visibility of customer demand and preferences
Four primary customer needs
1. Delivery: The customer gets the product when they need it. 2. Price: The customer needs to feel that they are receiving value for the money. 3. Reliability: The product performs as specified on a consistent reliable basis. 4. Options: Customers have enough choices to satisfy their needs.
Preventing failures
1. Design out fail points 2. Build in redundant system 3. Use failsafe work method 4. Perform maintenance: preventive maintenance, total productive maintenance 5. Mitigate risk
Speed objective of design process
1. Early product and service launch 2. Ability to delay the start of design 3. More opportunities for new product and service introduction and innovation 4. Benefits from the support of flexibility in responding to the marketplace 5. Requires high quality of specifications 6. Ties to competitive advantage in the market
Steps in change process
1. Establish the sense of urgency 2. Form a powerful guiding coalition 3. Create a vision 4. Communicate the vision 5. Empower others to achieve the vision 6. Plan for and create short-term wins 7. Consolidate improvements and produce still more change 8. Institutionalize new approaches
Strategic options for market entry
1. Exporting from home base 2. Licensing 3. Franchising 4. Alliances and joint ventures with foreign partners
Four categories of cost drivers in ABC costing
1. Factory sustaining activities: represent fixed and variable expenses that are unidentifiable by product. Examples would be plant management, facilities and grounds, etc. 2. Product sustaining activities are those that develop and update product and manufacturing information. Examples include engineering, bills of material, routings and standards. 3. Batch level activities are those that match the supply of materials, labor and capacity with demand. Examples include purchasing, receiving, material planning, etc. 4. Unit level activities are costs traditionally associated with individual production units. Examples include materials, direct labor, tooling, etc.
Functional layouts
1. Fixed-position layout 2. Functional layout 3. Cell layout 4. Product layout
Quality characteristics
1. Functionality - how well the product or service does its job 2. Appearance - sensory characteristics such as look, feel, sound and smell 3. Reliability - consistency of performance or length of acceptable performance 4. Durability - useful life 5. Recovery - problem resolution 6. Contact - knowledge and courtesy of staff
Five reasons for expanding globally
1. Gain access to new customers 2. Achieve lower cost, and competitiveness 3. Exploit core competencies 4. Spread business risk 5. Global leadership
Five reasons to expand globally
1. Gain access to new customers, 2. achieve lower costs and enhance competitiveness, 3. leverage strong core competencies, 4. spread business risk, 5. global leadership
Benefits of ERP system
1. Greater visibility of financial and operational performance 2. Adoption of better, integrated business processes 3. Improved control of operations 4. Better communication and information exchange with customers 5. Integration with supply chains of customer and supplier
Business strategy objectives
1. Grow the business 2. Differentiate from rivals 3. Outperform rivals 4. Achieve high levels of financial and market performance 5. Create sustainable competitive advantage
Adding capacity with new large-scale facilities
1. High overcapacity until demand catches up with capacity 2. Initial higher unit costs
Financial statement analysis types
1. Horizontal analysis: by time series comparing year to year 2. Vertical analysis: comparing percent of each item 3. Ratio analysis
Five key issues of the internal environment
1. How well the current strategy is working 2. Strengths and weaknesses, opportunities and threads 3. Competitiveness of prices and costs 4. Strength relative to competitors 5. Highest priority issues for management
Best-cost provider strategy
1. Hybrid, low cost approach to offer a differentiated product and service 2. Upscale attributes are incorporated using strategic advantage of lower-cost production than rivals 3. Product and service is significantly better than low-cost version 4. Price is significantly lower than higher-priced differentiated alternatives
Benefits of cash flow statements
1. Identify activities that cause cash inflows and outflows 2. Shows if operations generating cash 3. Shows if growth can be financed from cash 4. Enables organizations to take advantage of investment opportunities 5. Explains how organizations can pay dividends when net profit shows a loss 6. Identifies need to liquidate assets or borrow to support operations
Failure mode and effect analysis (FMEA)
1. Identify and ranks potential failures 2. Provide three scores: probability of failure occurrence, degree of severity, likelyhood of escape from detection 3. Multiples all three scores to determine risk priority number (RPN) 4. Prioritize potential failures for corrective action
Industry attractiveness and profitability
1. Industry decision factors: a) the industry's growth potential b) the effect of competition on current and future profitability c) The impact of driving forces on profitability d) The risk and uncertainty in the industry future e) Effects on regulation, environmental issues, customer demand, and industry overcapacity 2. Company-specific decision factors: a) Competitive position b) Relationship between competitive strength to rivals and industry attractiveness c) Ability to capitalize on vulnerabilities of competitors
Job design
1. Influence of volume and variety 2. Allocation of tasks 3. Job commitment through meaningful work: job enlargement, job enrichment, job rotation, empowerment and teams
Manage the bullwhip effect
1. Information sharing 2. Channel alignment 3. Operational efficiency and improved forecasting
Linkages
1. Inside-out: influences of company on society: infrastructure, HR, technology development, logistics, etc... 2. Outside-in: influences of society on company: available resource: HR, transportation, policies, local demand standards, etc...
Types of benchmarking
1. Internal 2. External 3. Non-competitive 4. Competitive 5. Performance 6. Practice
Examples of visual management
1. Kanban work authorization 2. Visual WIP management 3. Local display of production and quality data 4. Key performance measurement report
Assess the current strategy
1. Key competitive factors: a) efforts to build competitive advantages b) plans to outperform rivals c) ability to react to changing conditions d) geographic coverage e) collaborative partnership and strategic alliances 2. Value chain capabilities 3. Quantitative and other measures: a) Sales and market shares growth compared to competitors b) New customer acquisition rate c) Changes in net profit margins d) Net profit and ROI trends e) Innovation and new product, service introduction f) Improvement in financial strength and credit rating g) Strong positive brand association
Adding capacity with small-scale facilities
1. Less overcapacity as demand catches up with capacity 2. Possible lower initial unit costs
Basic competitive options
1. Localized multicountry strategy: a) Product adapted and packaged to accommodate local preferences b) Difficult to develop a single competitive strategy c) Plants located in multiple countries and use of local suppliers d) wide autonomy for country manager --> higher cost structure in multicountry strategy 2. Global strategy a) Sales of same product in all markets and emphasis on strong brand b) Use of the same competitive strategy in all markets c) Plants and best suppliers located where advantageous d) Transfer ideas, technologies and capabilities among markets 3. Hybrid strategy
Techniques for gaining competitive advantages
1. Location of value chain activities to reduce costs 2. Transfer of competitive competencies and capabilities to operations in foreign market 3. Use of profit sanctuaries and cross-market subsidization
Types of competitive strategies
1. Low cost provider: lower overal costs to broad customer 2. Broad differentiation: differentiate in products attribute, service, and image 3. Best-cost provider: excellent product attributes at a lower cost 4. a focused low-cost provider: appeals to a narrow market with low cost 5. focused differentiation: offer a differentiated product to a narrow market
Low-cost provider strategy
1. Maintain high value chain efficiency, low value chain costs 2. Maintain low price, not neccesary frills-free 3. Underprice competitors to increase total profits 4. Achieve lasting strategic competancy that rivals find hard match
Benchmarking guidelines
1. Make benchmarking a continuous process 2. Use benchmarking for ideas not solutions 3. Understand your own processes 4. Use benchmarking to understand further not imitate 5. Allocate resources: staff and monetary resources
Outsourcing strategy
1. Make or buy decision 2. Cost, quality, speed, dependability, and flexibility 3. Operations ownership is not a strategic advantage 4. Tradeoff with vertical integration 5. Business process or product outsourcing
Steps to Corporate Strategy
1. Mission Statement 2. Company objectives 3. Environmental scanning 4. Internal strength and weakness analysis 5. Corporate Strategy
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSP)
1. Moral obiligation 2. sustainability 3. liscense to operate 4. reputation
6 simple rules for choosing the right measurements
1. Multiple measures are better than single measures. 2. Measurements should provide an agreed upon basis for decision making. 3. Measurements should be immediately understandable. 4. Measurements should be easily and correctly interpreted. 5. Measurements should be economical to obtain and apply. 6. Measurements must cause the correct response from a strategic perspective.
Project characteristics
1. One time focus 2. Specific purpose and desired results 3. Start and finish 4. Time frame for completion 5. Involvement of a cross functional group of people 6. Limited set of resources 7. Logical sequence of interdependent activities 8. Clear user of the results
Vertical integration strategy
1. Ownership of an organization's supply network 2. Strategic positioning 3. Financial and marketing strategy drivers
Cost of quality
1. Prevention costs 2. Appraisal costs 3. Internal failure costs 4. External failure costs
Three major process dimensions
1. Process entities 2. Process objects 3. Process activities
Broad differentiation strategy
1. Product and service attributes lower buyer's costs of using 2. Buyers are attracted to intangible features of the product and service 3. Price premium is greater than cost to differentiate 4. Strategic capabilities are hard to match
Service process types
1. Professional services: relatively low volume, and delivered by highly trained people. Ex: IT, level, architectural, design, medical 2. Service shops: are somewhat standardized, but still be customized to meet customers' need. Ex: banks, school, restaurant, high-end stores, etc... 3. Mass services: high numbers of transactions, low customized service. Ex: airlines, rail networks, supermarket
Dependability objective of design process
1. Project management minimizes internal delays 2. Close relationship with suppliers and customers reduces process uncertainty 3. Flexible design process increases responsiveness 4. Dependable design process creates certainty of new product introduction and innovation schedules 5. Process dependability (internal) directly supports external competitive advantages in speed and quality
Manufacturing process types
1. Project process 2. Job shop process 3. Batch process 4. Mass process 5. Continuous process
Management's changing role
1. Promote cultural change 2. Use supervisors as coaches 3. Manage by observation 4. Share information 5. Provide incentives and recognition 6. Schedule extra time for dialog and problem solving
Performance appraisal and rewards
1. Provide attractive perks and fringe benefits 2. Rely on promotion from within whenever possible 3. Make sure employee's ideas and suggestions are valued 4. Create a work atmosphere with sincerity, caring, and mutual respect 5. State the strategic vision in inspirational terms 6. Share information with employees about financial performance, strategy, operations measures, market condition, and competitors' action 7. Have a workplace with appealing furniture and amenities 8. Be flexible in the approach to people management in multicultural environments
Competitive strength assessment - rating criteria
1. Quality and product performance 2. Reputation and image 3. Technological skills 4. Dealer network 5. Product and service innovation 6. Financial resources 7. Relative cost position 8. Customer service
Strategy for change
1. Reacting to change 2. Anticipating to change 3. Leading change
Supplier reduction strategy
1. Reduce the complexity of managing and coordinating suppliers 2. Reduce transaction cost 3. Focus on strategic issues
To set an org strategy for CSR, org should
1. Set the goal of shared value, 2. Identify points of intersection, 3. choose which social issues to address
Organizational forms
1. Simple: generally less than four levels 2. Functional: more formal design for larger complex organizations 3. Divisional: often called business units. They have all the functional staff necessary to conduct operations. 4. Conglomerate: like divisional designs, there is little task dependency among the groups 5. Hybrid: often referred to as a matrix design. This is usually required when several functional areas must be integrated.
Performance objectives
1. Speed 2. Dependability 3. Flexibility 4. Quality 5. Cost
Learning organization
1. Systematic problem solving 2. Experimentation with new approaches 3. Learning from their own experiences and past history 4. Learning from the experiences and best practices of others 5. Transferring knowledge quickly and efficiently throughout the organization
Seven key issues of External Environment
1. The industry's dominant economics features 2. Strength of competition forces facing industry members 3. Forces driving industry change 4. Market positions occupied by industry members 5. Likely strategic moves by rivals 6. Key factors for future success in the industry 7. Industry attractiveness and profitability
Business strategy options
1. Thinking strategically about a company's external environment. 2. Thinking strategically about a company's internal environment.
3 phases of performance measurement change
1. Tinkering with Cost Systems - Companies will often tinker with the existing cost system to better reflect reality. They usually do this by changing the overhead allocation. 2. Cut the Gordian Knot - Companies will recognize that there is no way a cost accounting system can provide the appropriate measures for the business. They will "cut the cord" to the system and begin the process of adapting new measures for the business. 3. Embracing Change - Companies will finally change the manufacturing measures to become an integral part of the manufacturing strategy. If strategic objectives are to be met, then the measures must be supportive of these objectives.
Fault Tree Analysis (FTA)
1. Works backward from failure. 2. Identifies all possible causes of failure. 3. Branches with two nodes: AND - all branches below node A must occur for a node above it to occur. OR - Only one of the branches below this node must occur for the node above it to occur.
Four dimensions of operations management
1. level of interaction 2. operations management function 3. critical resources 4. decision focus.
Manufacturing and service facilities
1. manufacturing: factories, service centers, R&D lab, distribution 2. Service: Retail stores, warehouse, hospitals, office buildings, fire station
Transfer of competence and capability for gaining competitive advantages
1. to be first into new markets to gain market leadership and increase revenue 2. sustainable competitive advantages
External stake holders, top management, general management and staff
3 main groups to Strategic Plan
Managerial Accounting
A branch of accounting that uses techniques such as break-even analysis, cost-volume-profit analysis, make-buy analysis, and others to provide information used in day-to-day decision making.
Differentiation Strategy
A business strategy that focuses on setting a product or service apart from the competition - focusing on making a product or service unique.
Lead Capacity Strategy
A capacity strategy in which, as demand increases and is expected to increase capacity is added prior to the realization of demand.
Manufacturing Strategy
A collective pattern of decisions that acts upon the formulation and deployment of manufacturing resources. To be most effective, the manufacturing strategy should act in support of the overall strategic direction of the business and provide for competitive advantages (edges).
Process focus
A company has a wide range of non-standard products. ETO & MTO. Job shop. Low volume, high variety. Functional layout.
Profit Sanctuary
A company's home or location operation that has higher volume than other locations & more profitability that gives the company extra strength to compete and competitive advantage
Business strategy
A company's________________is the framework for its operations strategy to manage resources.
Strategic Sourcing
A comprehensive approach for locating and sourcing key material suppliers, which often includes the business process of analyzing total-spend-for-material spend categories. There is a focus on the development of long-term relationships with trading partners who can help the purchaser meet profitability and customer satisfaction goals. From an information technology applications perspective, strategic sourcing includes automation of request for quote (RFQ), request for proposal (RFP), electronic auctioning (e-auction or reverse auction), and contract management processes.
Strategic Sourcing
A comprehensive approach for locating and sourcing key mtl suppliers, analyzing total spend for mtls, spend categories, developing long term relationships with trade partners, meet profitability and service goals. (RFQ, RFP, Contract Mgmt, electronic auction)
Knowledge-based System
A computer program that employs knowledge of the structure of relations and reasoning rules to solve problems by generating new knowledge from the relationships about the subject.
DSS - Decision Support System
A computer system designed to assist managers in selecting and evaluating courses of action by providing a logical, usually qualitative, analysis of the relevant factors.
Decision Support System
A computer system designed to assist managers in selecting and evaluating courses of action by providing logical, usually quantitative, analysis of the relevant factors.
Concurrent Engineering
A concept that refers to the simultaneous participation of all the functional areas of the firm in the product design activity. Suppliers and customers are often also included. The intent is to enhance the design with the inputs of all the key stakeholders. Such a process should ensure that the final design meets all the needs of the stakeholders and should ensure a product that can be quickly brought to the marketplace while maximizing quality and minimizing costs. Synonym: Participative design/Engineering
Participative Design/Engineering
A concept that refers to the simultaneous participation of all the functional areas of the firm in the product design activity. Suppliers and customers are often also included. The intent is to enhance the design with the inputs of all the key stakeholders. Such a process should ensure that the final design meets all the needs of the stakeholders and should ensure a product that can be quickly brought to the marketplace while maximizing quality and minimizing costs. Synonym: Co-design, Concurrent Design, Concurrent Engineering, New Product Development Team, Parallel Engineering, Simultaneous Design/Engineering, Simultaneous Engineering, Team Design/Engineering See: Early Manufacturing Involvement
TBC - Time-Based Competition
A corporate strategy that emphasizes time as a vehicle for achieving and maintaining a sustainable competitive edge. Its characteristics are 1) It deals only with those lead times that are important to the customers; 2) The lead-time reductions must involve decreases in both the mean and the variance; and 3) The lead-time reductions must be achieved through system/process analysis (the processes must be changed to reduce lead times). TBC is a broad-based strategy. Reductions in lead times are achieved by changing the processes and the decision structures used to design, produce, and deliver products to the customers. TBC involves design, manufacturing, and logistical processes.
Process Costing
A cost accounting system in which the costs are collected by time period and averaged over all the units produced during the period. This system can be used with either actual or standard costs in the manufacture of a large number of identical units.
Activity-based Cost Accounting
A cost accounting system that accumulates costs based on activities performed and then uses cost drivers to allocate these costs to products or other bases, such as customers, markets, or projects. It is an attempt to allocate overhead costs on a more realistic basis than direct labor or machine hours. Synonym: Activity-based costing, Activity-based cost accounting See: Absorption Costing
ABC Costing
A cost accounting system that accumulates costs based on cost drivers from activities performed, costs allocated to products, customers, markets, or other projects. It is an attempt to allocate OVHD costs on a more realistic basis than direct labor or machine hours.
Actual cost system
A cost system that collects historically as they are applied to production and allocates indirect costs to products produced based on the specific costs and achieved volume of the products.
Standard cost system
A cost system that uses cost determined before production for estimating cost of production then compares to actual costs and variances are computed.
Learning Curve
A curve reflecting the rate of improvement in time per piece as more units of an item are made. A planning technique, the learning curve is particularly useful in project-oriented industries in which new products are frequently phased in. The basis for the learning curve calculation is that workers will be able to produce the product more quickly after they get used to making it. Synonym: Experience Curve, Manufacturing Progress Curve
Value based quality
A degree of excellence at an acceptable price
SLA - Service Level Agreement
A document that represents the terms of performance for organic support.
Cost driver
A factor that determines workload effort required to perform an activity.
Operations Management
A field of study that focuses on the effective planning, scheduling, use, and control of a manufacturing or service org through the concepts from design engineering, industrial engineering, management of information systems, quality management, production management, inventory management, accounting, and other functions.
KPI - Key Performance Indicator
A financial or nonfinancial measure that is used to define and assess progress toward specific organizational goals and typically is tied to an organization's strategy and business stakeholders. A KPI should not be contradictory to other departmental or strategic business unit performance measures.
Network Planning
A generic term for techniques that are used to plan complex projects. Two of the best known network planning techniques are the critical path method (CPM) and the program evaluation and review technique (PERT).
Product Profiling
A graphical devise used to ascertain the level of fit between the manufacturing process and the order-winning criteria of its products. It can be used at the process or company level to compare the manf. capabilites with the market requirements to determine areas of mismatch or identify steps needed for realignment.
Work break down structure
A hierarchial description of a project in which each lower level is more detailed. Project summary work break down.
Best-cost provider
A hybrid approach that incorporates excellent product attributes into items at a lower cost than others, but at a price below the ability of their rivals to match. Efficient manufacturing or service strategy to incorporate upscale features.
Echelon
A level of supply chain nodes.
Balanced Scorecard
A list of financial and operational measurements used to evaluate organizational or supply chain performance. The dimensions of the balanced scorecard might include customer perspective, business process perspective, financial perspective, and innovation and learning perspectives. It formally connects overall objectives, strategies, and measurements. Each dimension has goals and measurements.
Fault tree analysis
A logical procedure that works backward from a failure to identify all possible causes of the failure.
Virtual Cell
A logical rather than physical grouping of manufacturing resources. Resources in virtual cells can be dispersed throughout a facility. Product mix changes may change the layout of a virtual cell. This technique is used when it is not practical to move the equipment.
Customer-Supplier Partnership
A long-term relationship between a buyer and a supplier characterized by teamwork and mutual confidence. The supplier is considered an extension of the buyer's organization. The partnership is based on several commitments. The buyer provides long-term contracts and uses fewer suppliers. The supplier implements quality assurance processes so that incoming inspection can be minimized. The supplier also helps the buyer reduce costs and improve product and process designs. Synonym: Customer Partnership See: Outpartnering
Synchronized Production
A manufacturing management philosophy that includes a consistent set of principles, procedures, and techniques where every action is evaluated in terms of the global goal of the system. Both kanban, which is part of the JIT philosophy, and drum-buffer-rope, which is part of the Theory of Constraints philosophy, represent synchronized production control approaches. Synonym: Synchronous Manufacturing See: Drum-Buffer-Rope, Kanban, Synchronous Scheduling
Quick Asset Ratio
A measure of a firm's financial stability. It is defined as (current assets - inventory) / current liabilities. A value greater than one is desirable. Synonym: Quick Ratio, Acid Test, Acid Test Ratio
Quick asset ratio
A measure of a firm's financial stability. It is defined as current assents - inventory / current liabilities. The greater the value than one is desirable.
Total Factor Productivity
A measure of productivity (of a department, plant, strategic business unit, firm, etc) that combines the individual productivities of all its resources, including labor, capital, energy, material, and equipment. These individual factor productivities are often combined by weighting each according to its monetary value and then adding them. For example, if material counts for 40 percent of the total cost of sales and labor 10 percent of the total cost of sales, etc, total factor productivity = .4(material productivity) +.1(labor productivity)+ etc.
Total Cost of Material Acquisition (enabler - performance indicator)
A measure of what we spend in total, to obtain the required material. Paperless purchasing and receiving systems reduce cost over time.
Key performance indicator
A measure that is used to define and assess progress toward specific organizational goals and typically is tied to an organization's strategy and business stakeholders. Should not be contradictory to other depts or BU performance measures.
Equivalent unit cost of one
A method of costing that uses the total cost incurred for all like units for a period of time divided by equivalent units completed during the same time period.
Payback
A method of evaluating an investment opportunity that provides a measure of the time required to recover the initial amount invested in a project.
Payback Method
A method of evaluating an investment opportunity that provides a measure of the time required to recover the initial amount invested in a project.
Discounted cash flow
A method of investment analysis in which future cash flows are converted, or discontinued, to their value at the present time. The net present value of an item is estimated to be the sum of all discounted future cash flows.
Discounted Cash Flow
A method of investment analysis in which future cash flows are converted, or discounted, to their value at the present time. The net present value of an item is estimated to be the sum of all discounted future cash flows.
QFD
A methodology designed to ensure that all major requirements of the customer are identified and subsequently met or exceeded through the resulting product design process and operation of supporting production management system
QFD - Quality Function Deployment
A methodology designed to ensure that all the major requirements of the customer are identified and subsequently met or exceeded through the resulting product design process and the design and operation of the supporting production management system. QFD can be viewed as a set of communication and translation tools. QFD tries to eliminate the gap between what the customer wants in a new product and what the product is capable of delivering. QFD often leads to a clear identification of the major requirements of the customers. These expectations are referred to as the voice of the customer (VOC). See: House of Quality
Five Forces Model of Competition
A methodology for analyzing competitive pressures in a market and assessing the strength and importance of each of those pressures. They are: - Buyer - Supplier - New Entrant Risk - Competing products in other industries risk - Current Rivalry risks
Throughput accounting
A mgmt accounting method that is based on the belief that because every system has a constraint the most effective way to evaluate the impact of purposed changes is by measuring throughput, inventory, and operating expense.
Information System Architecture
A model of how the organization operates regarding information. The model considers four factors: 1) Organizational functions, 2) Communication of coordination requirements, 3) Data modeling needs, and 4) Management and control structures. The architecture of the information system should be aligned with and match the architecture of the organization.
Continuous Improvement
A never-ending effort to expose & eliminate root causes of problems, small step improvements as opposed to big stem improvements.
Economy of scale
A phenomenon whereby larger volumes of production reduce unit cost by distributing fixed cost over larger quantities.
Focused Factory
A plant established to focus the entire manufacturing system on a limited, concise, manageable set of products, technologies, volumes, and markets precisely defined by the company's competitive strategy, technology, and economics. See: Cellular Manufacturing
FMEA - Failure Mode Effects Analysis
A procedure in which each potential failure mode in every sub-item of an item is analyzed to determine its effect on other sub-items and on the required function of the item.
Failure mode affects analysis
A procedure in which each potential failure mode in every sub-item of an item is analyzed to determine its effect on the other sub-items and on the required function of the item.
Business process redesign
A procedure that involves the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic org. improvements in cost, quality, service, and speed.
BPR - Business Process Engineering
A procedure that involves the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic organizational improvements in such critical measures of performance as cost, quality, service, and speed. Any BPR activity is distinguished by its emphasis on 1) Process rather than functions and products and 2) the customers for the process.
BPR - Business Process Reengineering
A procedure that involves the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic organizational improvements in such critical measures of performance as cost, quality, service, and speed. Any BPR activity is distinguished by its emphasis on 1) Process rather than functions and products and 2) the customers for the process.
Postponement
A product design strategy that shifts product differentiation closer to the consumer by postponing identity changes, such as assembly or packaging, to the last possible supply chain location.
Chase Strategy
A production planning method that maintains a stable inventory level while varying production to meet demand. Companies may combine chase and level production schedule methods. Synonym: Chase Production Method
Statistical process controls
A quantitative way of determining if quality processes are in control. Based on samples taken over time. Enables observer to identify root causes and implement corrective actions
Variable quality measures
A quantity that can assume any of a given set of values that are measured on a continuous scale length, weight, time
Perpetual Inventory Record
A record (inventory) is maintained at all times of the current stock by recording each material movement as it occurs.
Learning Curve
A reflection of the rate of improvement in time per piece as more units of an item are made.
Return on Investment
A relative measure of financial performance that provides a means for comparing various investments by calculating profits returned during a specified time period.
Avg. Return on Investment def.
A relative measure of financial performance that provides a means for comparing various investments by calculating the profits returned during a specified time period.
ROI - Return on Investment
A relative measure of financial performance that provides a means for comparing various investments by calculating the profits returned during a specified time period. In the Theory of Constraints, ROI is calculated as throughput minus operating expense divided by investment.
ISO 14000 Series Standards
A series of generic environmental management standards developed by the International Organization of Standardization, which provide structure and systems for managing environmental compliance with legislative and regulatory requirements and affect every aspect of a company's environmental operations.
ISO 14000 Series Standards
A series of generic environmental management standards developed by the international organization of standardization, which provide structure and systems for managing environmental compliance with legislative and regulatory requirements and affect every aspect of a company's environmental operations.
ISO 9000
A set of international standards on quality management and quality assurance developed to help companies effectively document the quality system elements to be implemented to maintain an efficient quality system. The standards, initially published in 1987, are not specific to any particular industry, product, or service. The standards were developed by the International Organization for Standardization, known as ISO, a specialized international agency for standardization composed of the national standards bodies of 91 countries. The standards underwent major revision in 2008 and now include ISO9000:2008 (definitions), ISO9001:2008 (requirements), and ISO9004:2008 (continuous improvement). See: ISO/TS 16949, QS 9000
ISO 9000
A set of international standards on quality management and quality assurance developed to help companies effectively document the quality system.
Benchmark measures
A set of measurements (or metrics) that is used to establish goals for improvements in processes, functions, products, and so on. Benchmark measures are often derived from other firms that display best-in-class achievement.
Baseline Measures
A set of measurements (or metrics) that seeks to establish the current or starting level of performance of a process, function, product, firm, and so on. Baseline measures are usually established before implementing improvement activities and programs.
Benchmarking
A set of measurements that is used to establish goals for improvements in the processes, functions, products, and so on. Often derived from other firms that display best in class achievement.
Quality Circle
A small group of people that usually work as a team / unit that meet frequently to solve problems concerning the quality of items produced and process capabilities.
Functional Strategy
A strategy that is built from the business strategy for the various business functions such as finance, marketing, and production.
Supply Chain
A string of operations through an org.'s supply network.
SWOT Analysis
A structured approach to analyzing the internal strengths and weaknesses of a company's resources & capabilities and it's external market opportunities and threats.
House of quality
A structured process that relates customer defined attributes to the product's technical features needed to support and generate these attributes.
HOQ - House of Quality
A structured process that relates customer-defined attributes to the product's technical features needed to support and generate these attributes. This technique achieves this mapping by means of a six step process: 1) Identification of customer attributes; 2) Identification of supporting technical features; 3) Correlation of the customer attributes with the supporting technical features; 4) Assignment of priorities to the customer requirements and technical features; 5) Evaluation of competitive stances and competitive products; and 6) Identification of those technical features to be used (deployed) in the final design of the product. HOQ is part of the Quality Function Deployment (QFD) process and forces designers to consider customer needs and the degree to which the proposed designs satisfy these needs. See: Customer-defined Attributes, Quality Function Deployment
Performance Measurement System
A system for collecting, measuring, and comparing a measure to a standard for a specific criterion for an operation, item, good, service, business, etc. A performance measurement system consists of a criterion, a standard, and a measure. Synonym: Metrics See: Performance Criterion, Performance Measure, Performance Standard
Participative Management
A system that encompasses various activities of high involvement in which subordinates share a significant degree of decision-making power with their immediate superiors. Participative management draws on the rationale that everyone in an organization is capable of and willing to help guide and direct the organization toward agreed-on goals and objectives.
Strategic Mapping
A technique to compare how various companies in a market compete against each other.
RAM - Responsibility Assignment Matrix
A tool to ensure that each component of work in a project is assigned to a responsible person.
Five Forces Model
A tool used to analyze the principal competing pressures in a market and to assess the strength and importance of each.
Process Focused
A type of manufacturing organization in which both plant and staff management responsibilities are delineated by production process. A highly centralized staff coordinates plant activities and intracompany material movements. This type of organization is best suited to companies whose dominant orientation is to a technology or a material and whose manufacturing processes tend to be complex and capital intensive. See: Product Focused, Process-focused Organization
Product Focused
A type of manufacturing organization in which both plant and staff responsibilities are delineated by product, product line, or market segment. Management authority is highly decentralized, which tends to make the company more responsive to market needs and more flexible when introducing new products. This type of organization is best suited to companies whose dominant orientation is to a market or consumer group and where flexibility and innovation are more important than coordinated planning and tight control. See: Process Focused, Process-focused Organization
Continuous Manufacturing
A type of manufacturing process that is dedicated to the production of a very narrow range of standard products. The rate of product change and new product information is very low. Significant investment in highly specialized equipment allows for a high volume of production at the lowest manufacturing cost. Thus, unit sales volumes are very large, and price is almost always a key order-winning criterion. Examples of items produced by a continuous process includes gasoline, steel, fertilizer, glass, and paper. Synonym: Continuous Production
QS 9000
A variation of ISO 9000 certification with additional requirements tailored for the automobile industry, including suppliers.
QS 9000
A variation of ISO 9000 certification with additional requirements tailored for the automobile industry, including suppliers. QS 9000 is being superseded by ISO/TS 16949 which incorporates many European standards. See: ISO 9000, ISO/TS 16949
Operational equipment effectiveness
Ability of the cells machines to make product on time and to the right quality, based on machine availability, efficiency, and quality - bottleneck
GAAP - Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Accounting practices that conform to conventions, rules, and procedures that have general acceptability by the accounting profession.
Generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP)
Accounting practices that conform to conventions, rules, and procedures that have general acceptability by the accounting profession.
The goal of sustainability
Achieve high performance levels in the long term. Avoid detrimental behaviors in the short term.
Sustainability
Activities that provide present benefit without compromising the needs of future generations.
ABM
Activity based management
VOC - Voice of Customer
Actual customer descriptions in words for the functions and features customers desire for goods and services. In the strict definition, as relates to quality function deployment (QFD), the term customer indicates the external customer of the supplying entity.
Tracking / Chasing Demand
Adding additional capacity in small increments to follow the demand pattern.
Tracking Capacity Strategy
Adding capacity in small amounts to attempt to respond to changing demand in real time in the marketplace. This approach may satisfy total demand and help minimize unit costs, but it can be difficult in some situations to add incremental amounts of capacity, especially if the facility has no more space available.
Support across the border, shared knowledge base, increased competitive advantage, unbalanced work load shared between countries
Advantages of cross border operations
Lower transportation costs, reduced delivery time, less exchange rate impact
Advantages of multiple international locations
Licensing strategy for market entry
Advantages: 1. Applicable to proprietary technical know-how or unique patented product 2. Income generated by royalties 3. Low resource requirement 4. Low investment risk Drawback: 1. Sharing valuable intellectual property with 3rd party 2. Difficult in enforcing gray areas of license agreement 3. High risk of patent infringement
Strategic alliances and joint ventures strategy for market entry
Advantages: 1. Better access to attractive markets through well positioned local companies 2. Economies of scales in production and marketing 3. Fills in technical expertise gaps of local company 4. Fill in market knowledge gap of company seeking access Drawback: 1. More business risk than other strategy 2. Impact of cultural differences on decision making 3. Disagreement on what are remain propriety to one party 4. Differences in corporate values and ethical standards
Large-scale operations
Advantages: 1. Economies of scale 2. Average cost per unit decrease as utilization increase 3. Good fit for high-volume, low-variety products 4. Flexibility to adjust volume Disadvantages: 1. Less flexibility of equipment, workers 2. Worker skills not as high as in small-scale operations 3. Diseconomies of scale
Small-scale operations
Advantages: 1. Locate near local knowledge networks 2. Respond faster to regional needs and trends 3. Agile and more entrepreneurial management Disadvantages: 1. Average production cost per unit is higher than for large-scale operations
Export strategy for market entry
Advantages: 1. Low-risk initial move 2. Modest investment needed 3. Economies of scales of home-country production 4. Reliance on the expertise of foreign wholesalers in handling marketing, import and distribution of products 5. Establish its own distribution, sales promotion, brand awareness function Drawback 1. High cost of shipping 2. Possible loss of home-country production cost in long run 3. Possible loss of cost advantage to rival's plants 4. Currency exchange rate
Focused Low - Cost Provider
Aim is at very specific market. Providing special features to meet demand at a low price. Special attributes for niche market.
Focused Differentiation
Aim is for provider to provide special extra attributes to niche needs. Cost is not a key factor. Customized service. Long term aim is to service niche market in best way possible.
Objectives of the operation's strategy
Align operations with business strategy and market requirements, provide vision of an operation's strategy, define performance objectives, reconcile strategic decisions to performance objecties
Objectives of operation's strategy
Align operations with business strategy and market requirements, provide vision of an operations strategy, define performance objectives, reconcile strategic decisions to performance objectives. (Alignment, vision, operations objectives, reconcile)
Objectives of operations strategy
Alignment, vision, performance objectives,
Cost of Quality
All costs associated with prevention activities and the improvement of quality throughout the firm before, during, and after production of a product.
Design for quality
All parties involved in total project start to finish so product is designed to meet customer requirements with manufacturing processes in mind.
ERP and push system
Allows to: 1. Plan the schedules and routings of product through work centers 2. Plan schedule releases for make-to-stock products made on high-volume line 3. Recommend the release of work orders 4. Facilitate reporting at each stage of production
Payback Period Calculation
Amount invested / expected annual net cash inflow
Financial throughput
Amount of money generated in a time period. Sales revenue - Total Variable cost
Project Costing
An accounting method of assigning valuations that is generally used in industries where services are performed on a project basis. Each assignment is unique and costed without regard to other assignments.
Project Costing
An accounting method of assigning valuations that is generally used in industries where services are performed on a project basis. Each assignment is unique and costed without regard to other assignments. Examples are shipbuilding, construction projects, and public accounting firms. Project costing is opposed to process costing where products to be valued are homogeneous.
Contribution Margin
An amount equal to the difference between sales revenue and variable costs.
Contribution Margin definition
An amount equal to the difference between sales revenue and variable costs.
Competitive Analysis
An analysis of a competitor that includes its strategies, capabilities, prices, and costs.
SWOT Analysis
An analysis of strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of and to an organization. SWOT analysis is useful in developing strategy.
Competitive Analysis
An analysis of the market place comparing the company's competitors; market share, marketing strategy, ad spend, price, costs, strengths etc.
Cash Flow
An analysis that compares the timing of money being received and expenses being paid
Absorption Costing
An approach to inventory valuation in which variable costs and a portion of fixed costs are assigned to each unit of production. The fixed costs are usually allocated to units of output on the basis of direct labor hours, machine hours, or material costs. Synonym: Allocation Costing See: Activity-based Costing
Value Chain Analysis
An examination of all links a company uses to produce and deliver its products and services starting from the origination point and continuing through delivery to the final customer.
Bullwhip effect
An extreme change in the supply position upstream in a supply chain generated by a small change in demand down stream in the supply chain.
Bullwhip Effect
An extreme change in the supply position upstream in a supply chain generated by a small change in demand downstream in the supply chain. Inventory can quickly move from being backordered to being excess. This is caused by the serial nature of communicating orders up the chain with the inherent transportation delays of moving product down the chain. The bullwhip effect can be eliminated by synchronizing the supply chain.
Alignment
An important objective of operations strategy is to align operations with business strategy and market requirements. It is also to align operations perspective with market perspective.
Job enlargement
An increase in the # of tasks an employee performs.
Employee enrichment
An increase in the # of tasks as employee performs and an increase in the control over those tasks.
Job Enrichment
An increase in the number of tasks that an employee performs and an increase in the control over those tasks. It is associated with the design of jobs and especially the production worker's job. Job enrichment is an extension of job enlargement.
Job Enlargement
An increase in the number of tasks that an employee performs. Job enlargement is associated with the design of jobs, particularly production jobs, and its purpose is to reduce employee dissatisfaction.
Cash-to-Cash Cycle Time
An indicator of how efficiently a company manages its assets to improve cash flow. Inventory days + AR days - AP days = C2C cycle. See: Cash Conversion Cycle
Cash to cash cycle
An indicator of how efficiently a company manages its assets to improve cash flow. Inventory days + accounts receivables days - account payable days.
Variable costing
An inventory valuation method in which only variable production costs are applied to the product. Fixed overhead is not assigned to the product. Direct labor, direct material, and variable overhead applied. Used in "make or buy" decisions.
Variable Costing
An inventory valuation method in which only variable production costs are applied to the product; fixed factory overhead is not assigned to the product. Traditionally, variable productions costs are direct labor, direct material, and variable overhead costs. Variable costing can be helpful for internal management analysis but is not widely accepted for external financial reporting. For inventory order quantity purposes, however, the unit costs must include both the variable and allocated fied costs to be compatible iwth the other terms in the order quantity formula. For make-or-bur decisions, variable costing should be used rather than full absorption costing. Synonym: Direct Costing
Absorption or full costing
An inventory valuation technique in which all costs incurred in a period to directly manufacture or support the production of products be charged to the units completed.
JIT
An operating philosophy aimed at the elimination of waste.
Horizontally Integrated Firm
An organization that seeks to produce and sell a type of product in numerous markets. Similar products in various geographical locations.
Horizontally Integrated Firm
An organization that seeks to produce or sell a type of product in numerous markets. The horizontal integration exists when an organization produces or sells similar products in various geographical locations. Horizontal integration in marketing occurs more frequently than horizontal integration in production. See: Vertically Integrated Firm
Productivity
An overall measure of the ability to produce a good or service. Actual output compared to actual input of resources, labor, capital etc.
Infrastructure Elements
An underlying base or foundation especially for an organization or system. Elements of a strategy including decisions, rules, policies, personnel, guidelines, & organizational structure. Must use overall strategy of the company and manf. process. Impacts competitiveness
Wip to Swip
Analyze WIP to determine pull system effectiveness
Inventory Turns calculation
Annual cost of goods sold / average inventory
Avg. ROI
Annual net cash income / initial cash investment x 100
Traceability
Any material that is used to make a product must be accompanied with a release document that lists the origin of this material and the tests performed on it.
Trading Partner
Any organization external to the firm that plays an integral role within the supply chain community and whose business fortune depends on the success of the supply chain community.
Focused low-cost provider
Appeals to a narrow market segment and underprices rivals by lower-cost production or service. Reconfigures value chaine to reduce cost.
Generic Social Issues
Are not significantly affected by the organization's operations. Do not influence the organization's long term competitiveness
Value Chain social issues
Are significantly affected by the organization's activiites
Social dimensions of competitive context issues
Are social issues in the external environment that can affect the driver's of the orgs competitiveness
Use failsafe work methods
Assume that human error is inevitable and design systmes to prevent human errors.
Cross subsidization advantages
Attack a rival's home market or main profit sanctuary to divert resources and attention to defending its home market position. And selectively attack rivals in different country markets to improve market share
ARR Calculation
Average annual operating income from an asset / average amount invested in an asset
The Deming Prize
Award for companywide statistical quality control
Value-creating operations
Basic building blocks of org's supply network and supply chain
Price leadership, product differentiation, customer focus
Basic business strategy approaches
Closing
Bring projects and project phases and contracts with customers to a close; hand over deliverables to customer
Channel alignment
Bringing all operations in a supply chain in line with each other through coordinated production scheduling, material movement, stock levels, and sales strategies. VMI
Integrated Measurement Model
Broad strategic objectives, measures at the top can be exploded down into detailed ones at the operations level, selected performance indicators, measures to track depends on competitive strategy
Core Competencies
Bundles of skills or knowledge sets that enable a firm to provide the greatest level of value to its customers in a way that is difficult for competitors to emulate and that provides for future growth. Core competencies are embodied in the skills of the workers and in the organization. They are developed through collective learning, communication, and commitment to work across levels and functions in the organization and with the customers and suppliers. For example, a core competency could be the capability of a firm to coordinate and harmonize diverse production skills and multiple technologies. To illustrate, advanced casting processes for making steel require the integration of machine design with sophisticated sensors to track temperature and speed, and the sensors require mathematical modeling of heat transfer. For rapid and effective development of such a process, materials scientists must work closely with machine designers, software engineers, process specialists, and operating personnel. core competencies are not directly related to the product or market.
BPR
Business Process Engineering
BPR
Business Process Reengineering
Sustainable Management Systems Model Components
Business case - costs and benefits (waste disposal, salaries, reduced fines, savings), Org. component - Mgmt buy-in, resources, mgmt structure, Operational component - link SMS to overall strategic plan (procedures, training, engage stakeholders), ERP - facilitate business operations internally and externally, Monitoring and audits - review SMS performance at regular intervals.
Five Sustainable Management Systems model components
Business case, organizational component, operational component, enterprise resource planning, monitoring and audits
Rivalry among competitors is stronger when
Buyer demand grows slowly or falls off, number of rivals increases, products are commodities, cost to switch brands is low, rivals make aggressive moves to attract buyers, rivals have diverse strategies
Rivalry among competitors is weaker when
Buyer demand is growing, rival products are strongly differentiated, customer loyalty is high, costs to switch brands is high, there are fewer than five sellers
Buyers bargaining power is weaker when
Buyers purchase the item infrequently, cost to switch brands is high, surge in demand creates a sellers market, sellers brand reputation is important to buyer, a specific sellers product or service best matches buyer requirements.
Inventory Turns
COGS / avg. inventory - measures the # of times per year a company sells its average inventory
Labor costs
Calculated by taking the standard hours required to produce a product and applying a labor rate to it.
Expand Globally - Achieve lower costs and gain competitiveness
Can result in higher sales volumes needed to capture economies of scale, leading to improved competitiveness
Capacity Requirements Planning
Capacity check of the plan created by MRP. Calculating standard hours required by work center per time period for a full horizon of the MPS.
Four main operations decision areas
Capacity strategy, supply network strategy, process technology strategy, development and organization
Net Cash Inflow
Cash flow intake - Cash outflow
Cash Flow
Cash inflow - cash outflow
What is a disadvantage to selecting a large scale change in capacity?
Causes excess capacity while demand catches up
Day-by-the-hour
Cell's ability to match takt time and act quickly when problems arise
Labor grade
Classification of workers whose capability indicates their level of skill or craft.
Utilization
Clocked hours / hours available
Closing phase
Close project, close contracts
Capacity constrained resource
Close to becoming a bottleneck if not managed carefully.
Social responsibility
Commitment by top management to behave ethically and to contribute to community development. Improving the workforce's quality of life.
Social Responsibility
Commitment by top management to behave ethically and to contribute to community development. This may also entail improving the workforce's quality of life.
Rivalry among competing sellers
Companies in the same industry compete among themselves for new customers, market share, long term competitive advantage.
Value Chain and operation strategies
Companies need to align ______________ with the selected competitive business strategy.
4th step in HOQ is
Compare customer requirements with technical design requirements and assigned relationship rating
Once value chain analysis is complete company must
Compare to that of rival companies including primary and secondary activities
External benchmarking
Compares an operation with operations in other organizations
Non-competitive benchmarking
Compares an operation with those of non-rival organizations
Competitive benchmarking
Compares an operation with those of rival organizations
Performance benchmarking
Compares an organization's achievements with those of another in selected performance areas, such as process design, delivery, as determined by the five generic performance objectives
Practice benchmarking
Compares an organization's practices to best practices
Internal benchmarking
Compares operations within the same organization
Benchmarking
Comparing a company's costs, products, and services to that of a company thought to have superior performance. The benchmark target is often a competitor but is not always a firm in the same industry. Seven types of benchmarking have been cited: 1) Competitive benchmarking. 2) Financial benchmarking. 3) Functional benchmarking. 4) Performance benchmarking. 5) Process benchmarking. 6) Product benchmarking. 7) Strategic benchmarking. See: Competitive benchmarking, Financial benchmarking, Functional benchmarking, Performance benchmarking, Process benchmarking, Product benchmarking, Strategic benchmarking.
Main advantage of arm's length transactions
Competition among suppliers can lead to low purchase price and possible high value.
Use of SPC can lead to
Competitive advantage
Business strategy must reflect the company's
Competitive advantage - strong points
Industry Attractiveness & Profitability: Company specific decision factors
Competitive position in relation to rivals (strong / weak), relationship between competitive strength relative to rivals and industry attractiveness, ability to capitalize on vulnerabilities of competitors & outperform them.
Industry attractiveness - Company specific
Competitive position, competitive strength in relation to rivals, ability to capitalize on vulnerabilities of competitors and out perform them,
It's better to chose one competitive strategy than to
Compromise between them
Long term partnerships with suppliers
Compromise between vertical integration and transactional relationship. Continuing relationships based on mutual advantage and trust. Sharing forecasts and inventory data. Multiple points of contact exist.
Insourcing
Concept of making a strategic decision to utilize in-house facilities rather than outsource the requirement.
Project Phases
Conceptual, Planning, Execution, Monitoring and Controlling, and Closing
Project phases
Conceptual, planning, execution, monitoring, closing
SWOT Analysis leads to
Conclusions about the company's overall business health and sustainability and preliminary recommendations for actions to improve it's market position and profitability.
Transcendent quality
Condition of excellence
Manufacturing based quality
Conformance to requirements
Conceptual Phase
Consider project feasibility, environment, and stakeholders:
Process Technology
Consists of machines, equipment, and software that help processes transform materials and customers.
An important aspect of TQM is
Continuous improvement
Execution
Coordinate people and resources and direct activities consistent with the project plan
Internal strength and weakness analysis at a corporate level reviews
Core competence, value chain analysis, SWOT analysis
Important design decisions
Cost and flexibility
Prevention Costs
Cost caused by quality improvement activities that focus on reduction of failure, appraisal costs, education, training, supplier certification.
Buyers bargaining power is stronger when
Cost to switch brands is low, buyers are large and can demand concessions, buyer demand is weak or buyers are few, buyer's name adds prestige to seller's customer list, buyer can postpone purchases for later offers, buyer has resources to become a competitor
Suppliers bargaining power is stronger when
Cost to switch to alternate supplier is high, there are few suppliers, supplier has an enhanced quality, supplier has resources to become a powerful rival
Suppliers bargaining power is weaker when
Cost to switch to alternative is low, item is a commodity, good substitutes exist, suppliers are abundant, buyers account for a big fraction of suppliers sales, buyers can manufacture their own requirements
Important delivery decisions
Cost, speed, dependability, flexibility
Appraisal Costs
Costs associated with the formal evaluation and audit of quality and inspection, quality audits, testing, calibration, and checking.
Process costing
Costs incurred by production are collected by time period and averaged over all units produced during that time period.
Operating expense
Costs incurred while producing output
External Failures
Costs related to things that go wrong after a product reaches customer -- returns and warranties
HOQ steps: Product Planning
Create technical requirements that incorporate what customer wants.
Inventory reduction
Create work cells and floor stock balances on shop floor with backflushing
The root of quality is
Creating value for customers by meeting or exceeding expectations
Competitive Intelligence
Critical to anticipating moves rivals are likely to make in order to counter or out maneuver them.
Disadvantages of franchising
Cultural differences with respect to quality, pressure to modify the product to meet local buyer tastes, which may be detrimental to the brand
Quick ratio
Current asses - inventory / liabilities = shows the ability to pay current liabilities without having to see inventories
Quick Ratio (acid test ratio)
Current assets - inventory / current liabilities - shows the ability to pay current liabilities without having to sell inventories
Current Ratio
Current assets / current liabilities
Current Ratio
Current assets / current liabilities - shows the ability to pay current liabilities from assets that can be converted to cash in the near term.
Current ratio
Current assets / liabilities = shows the ability to pay current liabilities from assets that can be converted to cash in the near term
Current Ratio
Current assets divided by current liabilities.
1st step in HOQ is
Customer wants and needs
Disintermediation
Cutting out the middleman. Bypasses downstream supply chain operations. Shortens supply chain. Reduces costs and increases profit. Gains better visibility of customer demand and preferences.
Circumstances that favor dispersing global activities across national markets
DCs, sales, and services activities located in various markets for order fulfill LT, service and repair, hedging exchange rates, transportation delays, and political instability
Pull environment key performance measures
Day-by-the-hour, first-time-through, wip-to-swip, operational equipment effectiveness
DSS
Decision Support System
In what MLC phase are the sales growth rates lower than the economy's growth rate?
Declining phase
In what MLC phase does produce strategy focus on differentiation of profitable products and low production costs?
Declining phase
Value Chain Analysis
Deconstructing the value chain for a product by determining physical flow of product from raw material to final customer. Analyze complexity in supply chain.
Value Chain Analysis
Deconstructing the value chain for the product by determining physical flow of product cost from raw material stage, to suppliers, to manufacturers, through distribution channels to price at final customer.
Planning Phase
Define objectives and design project, identify activities, estimate resources, develop budget and project plan: Objectives, scope, strategy: SOW, work breakdown structure
SLA - Service level agreements
Define the relationship between two functional areas in an org, response times, range of services, acceptable quality
Main advantage of supplier relationship
Dependability of delivery, quality of materials, joint development of new products and processes.
Preventing Risk - 5 strategies
Design out fail points, build in redundant systems, use failsafe methods, perform maintenance, mitigate risk
Three categories of strategic operations decisions
Design, delivery, development
Supply Chain Management
Design, planning, execution, control, and monitoring of supply chain activities with the objective of creating net value, building competitive infrastructure, leveraging worldwide logistics, synchronizing supply with demand and measuring performance globally.
Final stage of internal strategy development process
Determine company's price and cost competitiveness and create a detailed comparison of a company's competitive strengths and weaknesses to it's rivals.
Final phase of internal analysis
Determine company's price and cost competitiveness, create detailed comparison of company's strengths and weaknesses relative to rivals.
Marketing strategy
Determine market segment, focus on market niche, competitive analysis
Activity based cost accounting - price competitiveness
Determine the internal value chain or supply chain costs incurred by company's own primary activities and support activities.
ABC Costing is used in internal analysis to
Determine the internal value chain or supply chain costs incurred by it's own primary and support activities
Broad differentiation
Differentiates its products in the market to appeal to a broad base of customers; differentiating factors include product attributes, service, and image. JIT deliveries, selling online to lower transaction cost, higher quality. Image and prestige, parts and service, are attraction to buyers.
Execution (Implementation) phase
Direct and manage, perform quality assurance, establish and develop project team, distribute information
Three major choices related to vertical integration
Direction (upstream, downstream), Extent (how far should extend), Balance among operations (fully balanced, or service 3rd part operations?)
Four phases of recovery process
Discover, Act, Learn, Plan
Four phases of recovery processq
Discover, act, learn, plan
SWOT step 2
Draw preliminary findings and conclusions about relative strength or weakness of business, attractive aspects of business, aspects that are of concern.
Design out fail points
During the design phase of products development, organizations can employ methods such as FMEA to determine potential failures and redesign to prevent them
Competitive Stance
Each competitor markets his product its own way to increase market share and give them a competitive edge?
Gross profit
Earnings after cogs have been deducted for a given time period.
Net profit
Earnings less misc. income and expenses such as royalties, interest, and tax
Operation profit
Earnings remaining after all expenses deducted from gross profit
Performance characteristics that enable supply chains to speed throughput and shorten LT
Efficiency, quality, reduction in complexity, dependability, and flexibility
Analyze competitive approach: key competitive factors
Efforts to build competitive advantage, plans to outperform rivals, ability to react to changing conditions, geographic coverage, collaborative partnerships and strategic alliances.
In what MLC do companies attempt to perfect product or technology?
Emerging phase
Utilization (inhibitors - performance indicators)
Encourages unwanted production of unwanted product. Use to measure spare capacity and not people.
Operations performance objectives
Ensure that operations perform within the supply chain is based on the right mix of speed, quality, dependability, flexibility, and cost.
Expand Globally - Access to new customers
Ensures continued growth in demand for product
Environmental sustainability
Ensuring current processes involving the environment are pursued with the idea of keeping the environment as pristine as possible.
ERP
Enterprise Resources Planning
ERP
Enterprise resource planning systems
Holistic approach to desigh
Entire life cycle of product is considered.
ISO 14000
Environmental mgmt system based on a set of international standards
Product Layout
Equipment and workers are located to accommodate the flow of a product or customer in high volume operations. Auto assembly and self service cafeterias.
Kotter's 8 Steps to Transformation
Establish a sense of urgency, form a powerful guiding coalition, create a vision, communicate a vision, empower others to achieve the vision, plan for and create short term wins, consolidate improvements; produce still more change, institutionalize new approaches
Strategic Options for Market Entry
Exporting from home base, licensing, franchising, joint venture and alliances.
Strategic options for global entry
Exporting, licensing, franchising, joint ventures, direct ownership
Unions, stock holders, customers, suppliers, the community
External stakeholders
Strategic Drivers
Factors that influence business unit and manufacturing strategies.
FMEA
Failure Mode Effects Analysis
Nonevident Failure
Failure occurring in either a product or a production process that is not immediately evident. This may be indicative of a faulty design.
Sources of failure: supply
Failure of timing or quality of goods or services delivered into an operation
Sources of failure: environmental disruption
Failures caused by forces outside of the operation's control., such as weather, terrorism, etc.
Sources of failure: customer
Failures due to customer misuse
Sources of failure: product or service design
Failures not designed out of a product or service at time of development.
New entry threats are weaker when
Few potential entrants, entry barriers are high, poor industry outlook, slow demand growth, current industry members are strong
Balanced Scorecard Measurements
Financial perspective, customer perspective, internal business perspective, innovation and learning perspective
Four functional strategies created from corporate/ business strategy
Financial strategy, product development strategy, marketing strategy, operations strategy
The four Functional Strategies
Financial strategy, product development strategy, marketing strategy, operations strategy
Substitute products
Firms in other industries offering substitutes
Statement of work
First project planning document that should be prepared describes the purpose, history, deliverables, and measurable success. Captures support from customers and identifies contingency plans. Persuasive project.
User based quality
Fitness for use
Exporting, licensing, franchising, joint venture, direct ownership
Five international channel strategies
New customers, lower costs, exploit core competencies, access to other markets, spread business risk
Five major reasons for a company to compete internationally
Breakeven Point
Fixed costs / Unit contribution margin
Project manufacturing
Fixed position, functional layout, cell layout. Discrete products made one at a time that are highly customized.
Process layout
Flow lines, work cells, and group technology layouts. The work moves down a line through a series of processes and move, wait, queue is reduced Full over-lapping practiced.
Low cost provider
Focuses on overall costs in order to underprice competitors; sells to a broad range of customers. High capacity utilization, information technology, and supply chain efficiency.
ERP - Enterprise Resources Planning
Framework for organizing, defining, and standardizing the business processes necessary to effectively plan and control an organization so that organization can use its internal knowledge to see external advantage.
ERP - Enterprise Resource Planning
Framework for organizing, defining, and standardizing the business processes necessary to effectively plan and control an organization so the organization can use its internal knowledge to seek external advantage.
Quality characteristics
Functionality, appearance, reliability, durability, recovery, contact
Market Life Cycle: Rapidly Growing Phase
Further differentiation, innovation to expand product lines, lower prices, new geographical markets, brand building, access to new channels, further cost reduction
Market Life Cycle - Rapidly Growing Phase
Further differentiation, innovation to expand product lines, lower prices, new geographical markets, brand building, access to new channels, further cost reduction. Weak competitors drop out.
Five reasons to expand globally
Gain access to new customers, achieve lower costs and enhance competitiveness, leverage strong core competencies, spread business risk, global leadership
GAAP
Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
Social issues affecting the organization
Generic social issues, value chain social issues, social dimensions of competitive context.
What are the three approaches to competing globally
Global strategy, transnational strategy, multi domestic strategy
Transportation costs, communication barriers, cultural barriers, exchange rate, cost of shipment
Globalization issues
Expand Globally - Global leadership
Globalization of the world economy has induced leading companies in almost all industries to expand to foreign markets. Industry leadership means global leadership.
Business Strategy objectives
Grow the business, differentiate from rivals, outperform rivals, achieve high levels of financial and market performance, create sustainable competitive advantage
Market Life Cycle - Declining Phase
Harvest cash flow or sell and invest elsewhere, selective innovation and differentiation, selective promotions, further consolidation, intense focus on efficiency, low cost leadership
Market Life Cycle: Declining Phase
Harvest cash flow or sell and invest elsewhere, selective innovation and differentiation, selective promotions, further consolidation, intense focus on efficiency, low cost leadership
Responsive CSR
Have a positive effect on society, are incidental to the organization's business.
Build in redundant systems
Have back up processes or resources in place in case of a failure
Disadvantage of exporting
High costs of shipping to foreign markets, possible loss of home country cost savings advantage in long term, possible loss of cost advantages to rivals, rise of adverse effects from fluctuations in currency exchange rates
HOQ
House of Quality
QFD uses
House of quality "voice of customer"
Parts per million defects (enabler - performance indicator)
How many defects are recorded as qty or value %? Should reduce as TQM improves.
Value added per employment dollar (enabler - performance indicator)
How much of each dollar / wage can be seen as increasing the value added to the product. Improves as waste is reduced.
Five Force Model
How rivals compete for business in the marketplace; competition between sellers, treat of new entrants, threat of substitute products, supplier bargaining power, buyer bargaining power.
Overhead Rates (inhibitors - performance indicators
How the company costs, not directly related to manf., are allocated across all products as a %. A department should not be measured on how much product is stocked to recover overhead. Overhead is only recovered when product is sold.
Sources of failure: operation
Human, organizational, technology or facilities,
FEMA
Identifies and ranks potential failures providing three scores and prioritizes failures for corrective action
Failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA)
Identifies product or service failures and rates them for probability of failure, degree of severity, likelihood of escaping from detection. 1-5 scale to receive a RPN
Planning phase detailed planning
Identify activities, estimate time and resources, plan the project, set the schedule, develop the budget - statement of work and work breakdown structure
Process Improvement
Identify and eliminate causes of poor quality, process variation, and non-value added activities.
SWOT Phase 1
Identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats
SWOT step 1
Identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats
HOQ steps: Process Planning
Identify the manufacturing process steps required to produce product.
Lifecycle Costing
In evaluating alternatives, the consideration of all costs - including acquisition, operation, and disposition costs - that will be incurred over the entire time of product ownership.
Economic Value Added
In managerial accounting, the net operating profit earned above the cost of capital for a profit center.
Economic value add
In managerial accounting, the net operating profit earned above the cost of capital for a profit center.
PERT - Product Evaluation and Review Technique
In project management, a network analysis technique in which each activity is assigned a pessimistic, most likely, and optimistic estimate of duration. The critical path method is then applied using a weighted average of these times for each node. PERT computes a standard deviation of the estimate of project duration. See: Critical Path Method, Graphical Evaluation and Review Technique, and Network Analysis
Work breakdown Structure
In project mgmt, a hierarchical description of a project in which each lower level is more detailed
Scope
In project mgmt, the totality of the products to be created by a project
Overhead costs
Indirect costs that can not be easily related to a job. Depreciation, machinary, lights etc.
Industry attractiveness - Aggregate
Industry growth potential, driving forces, competition, regulation, risk
Industry Attractiveness & Profitability: Industry level decision factors
Industry's growth potential, effect of competition on current & future profitability, impact of driving forces on profitability, risk & uncertainty in the industry's future, effects of regulation, environmental issues, customer demand, and industry over-capacity.
Bathtub Curve
Infant mortality (early life), normal life, wear out
Bathtub Curve
Infant mortality, normal life, wear out
Inside out linkages
Influences of an organization's value chain activities on society
Outside in linkages
Influences of society on an organizations value chain activities
How to manage the bullwhip effect
Information sharing, channel alignment, and operational efficiency and improved forecasting
Payback Period
Initial cash investment / annual net cash income
Asset, Expense
Initially recorded as a__________inventory becomes an________when product is sold.
Trends vs. Absolutes (enabler - performance indicator)
Instead of recording actual results, we need to take the absolute results, then interpret them so we can make plans to improve the process.
Buyers with financial resources are a threat to sellers in their ability to
Integrate backwards
Types of benchmarking
Internal, external, non-competitive, competitive, performance, practice
Direct shipment, consolidated shipments, local distribution
International trade shipment options
Market Life Cycle Phase
Introduction, emerging, rapidly growing, maturing, declining
Strategic CSR
Involves transforming internal value chain processes and delivering value to customers in a way that addresses external social issues while strengthening company competitiveness.
Outsourcing Logic
Is activity of strategic importance, does company have specialized knowledge, is company's operations superior, is significant operations performance improvement likely? ----> No =
Conceptual project phase
Is the plan feasible, geographic, social, political, internal impacts to the project, uncertainty, complexity, who are stakeholders?
Social Dimensions of Competitive Context
Issues in the external environment that affect the driver's of competitiveness
Value Chain Social Issues
Issues significantly affected by org. normal activities
Generic Social Issues
Issues that may be important to society, but do not significantly affect the org. operations.
KPI
Key Performance Indicator
Analyzing internal environment includes
Key competitive factors (competitive advantage, collaborative partnerships and strategic alliances, value chain capabilities, SWOT
Multi domestic strategy disadvantages
Less innovation, increased production and distr. costs, lack of a single world wide competitive advantage
Global strategy disadvantages
Less responsive to changes in local markets, increased transportation and tariffs, higher global mgmt costs.
Shipment Linearity (enabler -performance indicator)
Level of shipments each day in the period. As variation is removed from manufacturing, shipments will be made on a regular basis instead of major shipments at month end.
Business strategy
Link between corporate strategy and operation strategy
Disadvantage of arm's length transactions
Little loyalty to customers. High transaction costs of numerous purchases.
Techniques for gaining competitive advantage globally
Location of value chain activities to reduce cost, transfer of competitive competencies & capabilities to operations in foreign markets, use of profit sanctuaries and cross market subsidization
Techniques for gaining global competitive advantage
Location of value chain to reduce costs, transfer of core competency and capabilities to foreign markets, use of profit sanctuaries and cross market subsidization
Identify points of intersection
Look for linkages between organization and society.
Market Life Cycle - Emerging Phase
Low cost or differentiation strategy, perfection of technology, awareness then brand loyalty, first mover advantage, partnerships to gain resources, expertise
Market Life Cycle: Emerging Phase
Low cost or differentiation, perfection of technology and product, awareness then brand loyalty, first mover advantage, partnerships to gain resources, expertise
Five generic competitive strategies
Low cost provider, broad differentiation, best cost provider, focused differentiation, low cost focus differentiation
Market Life Cycle - Maturing Phase
Low-cost leader, emphasis on cost and service, product pruning, expand sales to current customers, international markets, brand promotion, closure of low-volume high-cost channels, technology and flexibility to lower costs, mergers
Market Life Cycle: Maturing Phase
Low-cost leader, emphasis on cost and service; product pruning, expand sales to current customers, international markets, brand promotion, closure of low volume, high cost channels, technology and flexibility to lower costs, mergers
Types of competitive strategies
Low-cost provider, broad differentiation, best-cost provider, focused low-cost provider, focused differentiation
Five Generic Competitive Strategies
Low-cost provider, broad differentiation, best-cost provider, focused low-cost provider, focused differentiation.
Functional layout
Machines and skills are grouped together into work centers and the product is routed around the plant to have various operations performed.
Driving Forces
Major underlying causes of change in industry conditions and the competitive landscape; ie internet, globalization, innovation, risk reduction, differentiated products
Driving Forces
Major underlying causes of change in industry conditions and the competitive landscape; such as globalization, long-term growth rates, product innovation, risk reduction, entry and exit of major firms.
Reductionist Approach
Manager considers how to reduce the root causes that require a trade off. Must address issues so trade off is no longer applicable.
Trade-Off Approach
Manager considers how various options are related. High customer service = high inventory levels.
Overview Approach
Manager considers main factors of strategic core focus. More than one or two issues at the same time. Checklist.
Sequential Approach
Manager focuses on one of the five strategic objectives at a time. Cost, quality, speed, flexibility, dependability. Then moves on to next objective.
Circumstances that favor concentration of global activities in a few locations
Manf costs lower than others in certain regions, economies of scale, learning curve effects, proximity to research and development, location of suppliers
Mistake Proofing
Manf. or set up activities designed to prevent an error resulting in product defect.
MES
Manufacturing Execution Systems
Mistake proofing
Manufacturing or set-up techniques designed to prevent an error resulting in defect.
New entry threats are stronger when
Many possible entrants, entry barriers are low, industry is expanding, good profit outlook, rapid demand growth, current industry members are weak
Industry's dominant economic features
Markets, rivals, customers, buyers, products, supply and demand, technology, vertical integration, economies of scale, product innovation learning and experience
Transnational strategy
Mass customization, benefit to standardization, but need for local responsiveness.
Product / Service design
Matching firm capabilities and processes to meet the market needs and product life cycles.
Functional layout
Materials and semifinished products move through work centers that provide the necessary transformation. Routings differ for different products, flow pattern is complex. Surgery, radiography, hospital departments, air craft engines.
In what MLC phase does competition intensify?
Maturing phase
In what MLC phase is low cost leadership the competitive strategy?
Maturing phase
When does product pruning take place?
Maturing phase
First-time Through
Measure effectivenss of standardized work as reflected in output quality
Performance Objectives
Measurements that enable the firm to monitor whether or not the firm's strategy is being accomplished. Thus, the measurement should be aligned to strategy. Performance objectives may differ based on the hierarchical level of the firm (eg. department, business unit, corporation) and should be aligned with the corresponding strategy for that level.
Strategic Performance Measurements
Measurements that relate to the long-term goals of a business. Examples include profitability, market share, growth, and productivity. See: Global Performance Measurements, Operational Performance Measurements
Global measurements
Measurements used to judge the performance of a system as a whole.
Global Measurements
Measurements used to judge the performance of the system as a whole.
Cost of Quality (enabler - performance indicator)
Measures what is spent to obtain products that meet the required quality standards. Costs should reduce as the JIT / TQM policies are gradually adopted.
Sustainability
Meet needs of the present without comprising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
Quality functional deployment
Methodology designed to ensure that all requirements of the customer are identified through design and process engineering. Voice of the customer.
Failsafe or Poke Yoke
Methods of performing operations so that actions that are incomplete can't be completed.
Failsafe work methods (Poke Yoke)
Methods of performing operations so that actions that are incorrect can not be completed.
Strategic CSR
Modifies internal value chain processes to address social issues while reinforcing competitiveness. Addresses external social issues in a manner that is compatible with competitive advantage.
Monitoring and Controlling
Monitor, assess planned against actual and intervene if project is off course
Monitoring and control phase
Monitor, assess, intervene
Arguments for Corporate Social Responsibility
Moral obligation, sustainability, license to operate, reputation
Disadvantage to joint venture
More business risk than the other options, impact of cultural differences in mgmt style, disagreements on technology, differences in corporate values and ethical standards.
Competing Internationally Strategies
Multidomestic strategy, global strategy, transnational strategy
Transferring core competencies to build competitive advantage reasons
Need to be first into new markets to gain market leadership and increase revenues, long term sustainable global market leadership against competitors
Transfer of competence and capability to foreign markets
Need to be the first into a new market to gain market leadership and increase revenues. Long-term sustainable global leadership.
A/R Turnover
Net credit sales / average net A/R - measures the ability to collect cash from customers in turns per year
Not required by law - volunteer
Non-compulsory government regulation
Substitute competitive pressures are weaker when
Not a good quality, higher priced, cost to switch is high
Lag capacity strategy
Not adding capacity until a firm is operating at or beyond full capacity. This keeps unit costs minimized by working at full capacity but does not satisfy total demand.
Lag Capacity Strategy
Not adding capacity until the firm is operating at or beyond full capacity. This keeps unit costs minimized by working at full capacity, but does not satisfy total demand.
Number of Kanban's (enabler - performance indicator)
Number of Kanban's decrease as process improves and variation decreases.
Concepts that enhance design process
Number of parts minimized, use of proven capable parts, modular design.
Alignment, vision, performance objectives
Objectives of operations strategy
Reduce throughput to be competitive, meet quality standards, product mix & flexibility to meet market demand, support competitiveness and profitability.
Objectives of process design
Planning project phase
Objectives, scope, strategy
Failures
Occurrences that have negative consequences to operations.
Insourcing
Occurs when operations are delegated to an internal entity; a strategic decision often made to maintain control of certain critical production or competencies.
Broad Differentiation
Offering something different to the customer. Stresses variation at an extra cost. Long-term offer new features to keep in front of competition.
Focused differentiation
Offers differentiated products with customized attributes to a narrow market segment. Unique special product or service. Buyers willing to pay premium for product.
Variance (inhibitors - performance indicators)
One of the objectives to continuous improvement is to remove variance from the process and to make small step improvements. Measuring employees against variance is counter-productive.
Capacity Strategy
One of the strategic choices that a firm must make as part of its manufacturing strategy. There are three commonly recognized capacity strategies: lead, lag, and tracking. A lead capacity strategy adds capacity in anticipation of increasing demand. A lag strategy does not add capacity until the firm is operating at or beyond full capacity. A tracking strategy adds capacity in small amounts to attempt to respond to changing demand in the marketplace.
Expand Globally - Spread business risk
Operating in widespread markets can be a cushion against economic downturns in home and other markets
Capabilities
Operations management must first provide into the business strategy process the __________ of the organization.
Capacity strategy, supply network strategy, process technology strategy, development and organization
Operations strategy decision areas
Vision
Operations strategy must provide its own vision. This is not a vision of what the operations wants to achieve, but a vision of capabilities operations must have to provide value to the business and contribution operations must make to provide value to the business
Quality is considered to be a
Order qualifier
For differentiated products, quality can be a
Order winner
Leading Demand
Organizing more capacity to meet anticipated future demand.
Agility of suppliers
Orgs often cannot redirect resources as fast as their suppliers can to meet changing or new product and service requirements.
Arm's length or transactional relationships with suppliers
Orgs seek the best supplier whenever it is necessary to buy a particular item. Best price / conditions - fosters competition among suppliers. More transactions are independent of each other. Transactions are short term.
The SMS should be linked to the
Overall strategic plan
Vertical Integration
Ownership of the supply network, strategic positioning of the company, financial and marketing strategy drivers
Capital budgeting comparison methods
Payback period, accounting rate of return, net present value, internal rate of return
Stakeholder
People with a vested interest in a company, including managers, employees, stockholders, customers, suppliers, and others. * Involve in plans for change.
Quality, speed, dependability, flexibility, cost
Performance Objectives
In variable costing, fixed manf. overhead is applied to the
Period cost
Introduction, Growth, Maturity, Phase Out
Phases of product life cycle
Competitive strategy should have a balanced plan to
Please customers, counter rivals, respond to market, secure competitive advantage
SWOT Phase 2
Preliminary findings and conclusions about: 1. the relative strength or weakness of the business, 2. the attractive aspects of the business, 3. aspects that are of concern.
Total productive maintenance
Preventative maintenance plus continuing efforts to adapt, modify, and refine equipment to increase flexibility, reduce mtl handling, and promote continuous flow.
Costs of quality
Prevention costs, appraisal costs, internal failure, external failure
3 competitive advantage approaches
Price leadership, product differentiation, customer focus
Competitive pressure from substitute products
Price, quality, cost of switching
Competitive pressure from substitute products is related to these three things
Price, quality, cost of switching
HOQ results:
Prioritized list of customer wants, how we compare to competitors, what 1st solutions are and how they affect other customer attributes and each other, establish areas of improvement to work on.
FEMA three scores
Probability of failure occurrence, degree of severity, likelihood of escape from detection
Forward Integration
Process of buying or owning elements of the production cycle and the channel of distribution forward toward the final customer. See: Vertical Integration
Coupling and connectivity
Process technology can be used to couple or link the separate activities of a production process into a interconnected processing system.
Quality at the source
Producers responsibility is to provide 100% acceptable quality material to the consumer. Objective is to reduce or eliminate shipping / receiving quality inspections and lines stopped as a result of defect.
Time to market is reduced to absolute minimum, product is at a level of quality to meet demand, concepts of standardization and simplification to reduce cost and time to market, design equal or better than competition
Product / Process design critical objectives
PERT
Product Evaluation and Review Technique
Produced based quality
Product attributes define quality
In absorption costing, fixed manf. overhead is applied to the
Product cost
Mass continuous manufacturing
Product layout. Higher volume than repetitive process. Products flow continuously from one part to another and are not discrete. Gasoline, steel, glass. Capital intensive and less flexible than repetitive process.
Product focus
Product or service focus company that produces a limited number of standard products on dedicated lines. High volume, low variety. Repetition.
Fixed position layout
Product or service is stationary. Power generators, restaurants with servers.
Multi domestic strategy
Products adapted to accommodate local preferences, plants located in multiple countries, use local suppliers, wide autonomy for managers
Visual management and pull system
Products which are: 1. demand variances are low, high-volume and continous 2. Product complexity is low 3. Linear, or plant layout 4. Very little WIP
Outsourcing can be a strategic advantage if
Profit margins are low or the company does not have proprietary advantages in specialized knowledge, skills, or intellectual property.
MES - Manufacturing Execution Systems
Programs and systems that participate in shop floor control, including programmed logic controllers and process control computers for direct and supervisory control of manufacturing equipment; process information systems that gather historical performance information, then generate reports; graphical displays; and alarms that inform operations personnel what is going on in the plant currently and a very short history into the past. Quality control information is also gathered and a laboratory information management system may be part of this configuration to tie process conditions to the quality data that are generated. Thereby, cause-and-effect relationships can be determined. The quality data at times affect the control parameters that are used to meet product specifications either dynamically or off line.
Manufacturing execution systems
Programs and systems that participate in shop floor control.
Responsive CSR
Provides good citizenship, mitigates adverse effects of business activities
Visual Mgmt systems are best used in
Pull systems, lean
ERP functionality is best used in
Push systems
QFD
Quality Function Deployment
Purchase Price (inhibitors - performance indicator)
Quality and OTP are more important than price. Overall cost is really important, including cost to work with supplier and actions when supplier fails.
Attribute quality measures
Quality control value that is either yes or no value or is counted rather than being measured on a continuous scale
Internal Failures
Quality costs related to things that go wrong before product reaches the customer, scrap, rework, retesting, re-inspection
ISO 9000
Quality mgmt system based on a set of international standards
Development decisions
Quality, and cost
Operations Strategy performance objectives
Quality, cost, speed, dependability, flexibility
Competitive strategy performance objectives
Quality, speed, flexibility, dependability, cost
Value Chain support activities
R&D, HR, general administration
Value Chain Support Activities
R&D, technology, Human Resources, general administration
In what MLC do weak competitors drop out?
Rapidly growing phase
In what MLC phase do companies focus on new geographical areas?
Rapidly growing phase
Throughput
Rate at which product is being produced during a defined period of time.
Approaches to strategic change
Reacting to change, anticipating change, leading change
Three approaches to strategic change
Reacting to change, anticipating change, leading change
Substitute competitive pressures are stronger when
Readily available, attractively priced, have better features, cost of switching is low
The EFQM excellence model
Recognizes TQM and customer satisfaction
Mitigate risks
Reduce the negative consequences of risks through mitigation planning; economic mitigation such as having insurance.
Reductionist Approach (alt. operations strategy)
Reduce the root cause that require trade off. Mgmt approach must then address these factors so the trade off is no longer applicable. Required strategy builds these approaches into a plan.
Commonparts
Reduced setup, inventory costs, improved flexibility to customer demands, half design costs.
Scalability
Refers to being able to shift quickly to a higher level of useful capacity.
Automation
Refers to the ability of process technology to make decisions or carry out activities on its own.
Process Capability
Refers to the ability of the process to produce parts that conform to (engineering) specifications. Process capability relates to the inherent variability of a process that is in a state of statistical control See: Cp, Cpk, Process Capability Analysis
Trade-Off Approach (alt. operations strategy)
Requires the operations manager to consider how the various options are related. High service = high inventory. High volume vs. low cost.
Overview approach (alt. operations strategy)
Requires the operations manager to consider the main factors of the resources available, the technology in use, levels of integration approach to quality, relationship between management and work force, and planning.
Resiliency
Resiliency in the supply chain is the ability to return to a position of equilibrium after experiencing an event that causes operational results to deviate from expectations. Resiliency is increased by strategically increasing the number of response options and/or decreasing the time to execute those options. Resiliency is improved by risk monitoring and control.
Cell Layout
Resources for production processes are grouped into a cell or manf. unit, in which all transforming resources are located to facilitate flow. Work stations that are dedicated to assembly of high quality components for computer manf.
Value chain capabilities
Responsible for planning and execution of operations to carry out the business strategy.
Efficiency (inhibitors - performance indicators)
Restricts cross training. Efficiency goes down when management moves someone to another area to train. Should not be used to measure people.
Defects per person (inhibitors - performance indicators)
Restricts the idea that JIT works with teams and not individuals.
ROI
Return on Investment
RPN
Risk priority number - results from FMEA so failures can be ranked for corrective action
RPN
Risk priority number provided by FEMA analysis
Five Force Model market areas
Rivalry among competing sellers, suppliers to sellers, buyers to sellers, potential new entrants, substitution products
Global strategy
Sale of same product in all markets, strong brands, same competitive advantage in all markets, plants and suppliers located where advantageous, transfer of ideas, tech.. capabilities among markets
Profit Margin
Sales less all fixed and variable costs
Gross Margin
Sales less manufacturing costs both fixed and variable
Signs substitute competition is strong
Sales of substitutes are growing faster than sales in industry, producers of substitutes are adding new capacity, profits of producers of substitutes are rising
Acceptable Quality Level
Sample quantity received and make a "pass / fail" decision based on sample.
Supply Chain Management's objectives
Satisfy customers by providing goods and services when needed at a competitive cost, that are consistent with competitive strategies
Supply Chain Mgmt Objectives def.
Satisfy customers by providing goods and services when needed, at competitive cost, that are consistent with competitive strategies
Dumping
Selling goods below cost in selected markets to gain competitive advantage or off load surplus production
Statistical process controls
Serves to reduce lead time because its methods can be used to objectively close the engineering process and design capability gap.
SLA
Service Level Agreement
Setting the CSR strategy
Set the goal of shared value, identify points of interaction, choose which social issues to address
Disadvantages of licensing
Sharing valuable intellectual property and trade secrets with 3rd parties, difficulty of enforcing the gray areas of license agreements as to what items are proprietary, high risk of patent infringement
Responsibility at the source
Shifting day to day responsibility of running a work cell from managers to those actually involved.
Virtual Organization
Short-term alliances between independent organizations in a potentially long-term relationship to design, produce, and distribute a product. Organizations cooperate based on mutual values and act as a single entity to third parties.
Benchmarking guidelines
Should be continuous, used for ideas and not solutions, should not be used for imitation, requires leadership and continuity, resources and mgmt attention
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
Should be included in corporate objectives / business model; moral obligation, sustainability, license to operate, reputation.
Strategic group maps
Show clusters of industry rivals that have similar competitive approaches and market positions, geographical approach and price / quality. Objective is to establish these clusters to reveal close / distant competitors.
Design for Manufacturability
Simplification of parts, products, and processes to improve quality and reduce manufacturing costs.
Design for manufacturability
Simplification of parts, products, and processes to improve quality and reduce manufacturing parts. All parties involved from start to finish and uses QFD.
Barriers to entry from substitutes
Sizeable economies of scale or capital, consumer loyalty, strong and highly capitalized incumbents, inability to overcome advantages of incumbents in terms of proprietary technology, learning, experience, local supplier relationship, distribution channels
Core Competencies
Skills or knowledge sets that enable a firm to provide the greatest level of value to its customers in a way that is difficult for competitors to emulate and provides for future growth.
Benchmarking should be used for ideas and not
Solutions
Value Chain Activities - reasons for few locations
Some locations manf. costs lower than others, economies of scale, learning curve effects, proximity to research and development and supplier infrastructure
Innovation Speed
Specialist manf. are more likely to create innovations faster and at a lower cost.
HOQ steps: Process Control Planning
Specifies what process control methods to be used to ensure that the end result is of the desired quality level.
Efficiency
Standard hours / actual hours
Productivity calculation
Standard hours of output / clock time scheduled
Certified Supplier
Status awarded to a supplier who consistently meets pre-determined quality, cost, delivery, financial, and count objectives. Incoming inspection may not be required.
Periodic Inventory Record
Stock record are not continuously maintained & instead the stock is counted periodically. Ordering decisions made on the stock balance.
SWOT Analysis
Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats
Expand Globally - Leverage strong competencies
Strong core competencies in a domestic market may give a company a competitive advantage in other countries.
Free on Board
Supplier shipping material from overseas. Bank releases payment once the goods are loaded on the ship. Ownership passes to the customer. Customer responsible for insurance and shipping of the goods to his premises.
Value Chain primary activites
Supply Chain Mgmt, operations, distribution, sales and marketing, service, profit margin
Supply Chain Mgmt Objectives
Supply chain management and operations management objectives
Value Chain Primary Activities
Supply chain mgmt, Operations, Distribution, Sales and Marketing, Service, Profit Margin
Counter trade
Supplying country not paid in cash, instead goods and services
Perform maintenance
Take care of physical equipment and facilities to reduce risk of failure
2nd step in HOQ is
Technical characteristics
3rs step in HOW is
Technical design requirements
Core Process
That unique capability that is central to a company's competitive strategy.
Core process
That unique capability that is central to a company's competitive strategy.
Sustainability
The ability of an org to meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
Product-Mix Flexibility
The ability to change over quickly to other products produced in a facility, as required by demand shifts in mix.
Surge Capacity
The ability to meet sudden, unexpected increases in demand by expanding production with existing personnel and equipment.
Resilience
The ability to prevent, withstand, and recover from unwanted events.
Agility
The ability to succesfully manufacture and market a broad range of low-cost, high-quality products and services with short lead times and varying volumes that provide enhanced value to customers through customization. Agility merges the four distinctive competencies of cost, quality, dependability, and flexibility.
Agility
The ability to successfully manufacture and market a broad range of low-cost, high quality products and services with short lead times and varying volumes that provide enhanced value to customers through customization. Merges four distinctive competencies: cost, quality, dependability, flexibility.
Cross Subsidization
The ability to use profits from one or more markets to compete in other markets through cross market subsidies
Use of profit sanctuaries and cross market subsidies
The ability to use profits from one or more markets to compete in other markets through cross market subsidies. These subsidies enable the reduction of profit margins on certain products to force rivals to do the same.
Preventive Maintenance
The activities, including adjustments, replacements, and basic cleanliness, that forestall machine breakdowns. The purpose is to ensure that production quality is maintained and that delivery schedules are met. In addition, a machine that is well cared for will last longer and cause fewer problems. Synonym: Periodic Maintenance
Competitive Advantage
The advantage a company has over its rivals in attracting customers and defending against competitors. Sources of the advantage include characteristics a competitor can not easily duplicate; brand name, technology, skill set, etc.
Competitive Advantage
The advantage a company has over its rivals in attracting customers and defending against competitors. Sources of the advantage include characteristics that a competitor cannot duplicate without substantial cost and risk, such as a manufacturing technique, brand name, or human skill set. Synonym: Competitive Edge
Investment
The amount of money invested to be able to produce required output, includes cost of material.
Throughput time or cycle time
The completion time between two discrete units. The length of time from when material enters a facility until it exists.
Alignment
The concept of matching the market need to the resources of the company.
Capital Investment
The concept of spending money on an undertaking that will provide an income in the future.
Volume
The decision on plant layout relies heavily on?
Vertical Integration
The degree to which a firm has decided to directly produce multiple value-adding stages from raw material to the sale of the product to the ultimate consumer. The more steps in the sequence, the greater the vertical integration. A manufacturer that decides to begin producing parts, components, and materials that it normally purchases is said to be backward integrated. Likewise, a manufacturer that decides to take over distribution and perhaps sale to the ultimate consumer is said to be forward integrated. See: Backward Integration, Forward Integration
Vertical Integration
The degree to which a firm has decided to produce multiple value added stages from raw mtl to the sale to customer.
Gantt Chart
The earliest and best-known type of planning and control chart, especially designed to show graphically the relationship between planned performance and actual performance over time. Named after its originator, Henry L. Gantt, the chart is used for 1) Machine loading, in which one horizontal line is used to represent capacity and another to represent load against that capacity; or 2) Monitoring job progress, in which one horizontal line represents the productions schedule and another parallel line represents the actual progress of the job against the schedule in time. Synonym: Job Progress Chart, Milestone chart
Process Control
The function of maintaining a process within a given range of capability by feedback, correction, etc.
Value Chain
The functions with in an org. that adds value to the goods or services that org sells to customers?
Value Chain
The functions within a company that add value to the goods or services that the organization sells to customers and for which it receives payment.
Supply Chain
The global network used to deliver products and services from raw material to end customers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution, and cash.
Inside out linkages
The influences of an organization's value chain activities on society. Infrastructure, HR Mgt, procurement, inbound logistics. operations, outbound logistics, sales
Outside in linkages
The influences of society on an organization's value chain activities. Inputs to business (HR, transportation), competitive rules and incentives (policies), local demand standards (quality, safety, consumer rights), availability of supporting industries (service providers, producers).
Cash conversion cycle
The length of time from the purchase of raw materials to the collection of accounts receivables from customer for the sale of products and services.
Break-even Point
The level of production or the volume of sales at which operations are neither profitable nor unprofitable. The break-even point is the intersection of the total revenue and total cost curves. See: Total Cost Curve
Look ahead period
The longest batching period used for any item
Supply chain management
The management of relationships and flows along the string of operations and processes that produce value in the form of products and services to the customer.
Product positioning
The marketing effort involved in placing a product in a market to serve a particular niche or function.
Product Positioning
The marketing effort involved in placing a product in a market to serve a particular niche or function. Synonym: Service Positioning
Hurdle Rate
The minimum acceptable rate of return on a project.
Residual Income
The net operating income that an investment center earns above the minimum required return on its operating assets.
Risk
The potential for unwanted negative consequences from events.
Net Present Value
The present (discounted) value of future earnings (operating expenses have been deducted from net operating revenues) for a given number of time periods.
Net value Method
The present value of future earnings for a given # of time periods.
Backward Integration
The process of buying or owning elements of the production cycle and channel of distribution back toward raw material suppliers. See: Vertical Integration
Backward Integration
The process of buying or owning elements of the production cycle back towards the raw mtl.
Forward Integration
The process of buying or owning elements of the production cycle forward to the customer. Distribution channels.
Disintermediation
The process of eliminating an intermediate stage or echelon in a supply chain.
Disintermediation
The process of eliminating an intermediate stage or echelon in a supply chain. Total supply chain operating expense is reduced, total supply chain inventory is reduced, total cycle time is reduced, and profits increase amon the remaining echelons. See: Echelon
Outsourcing
The process of having suppliers provide goods and services that were previously provided internally. Outsourcing involves substitution - the replacement of internal capacity and production by that of the supplier. See: Subcontracting
Operations planning
The process of setting goals and targets and establishing measures constrained by and target for achieving the strategic tactical plans.
Environmental Scanning
The process used to find out all the key approaches used by a company & the advantage it gives them in the marketplace?
Key Success Factors
The product attributes, organizational strengths, and accomplishments with the greatest impact on future success in the marketplace.
Jobbing
The production of unique products to meet a customer's requirement - low volume, high variety.
Throughput-based performance measures (enabler - performance indicator)
The rate at which output is produced. Time between each produce made is reduced as waste is reduced.
Internal Rate of Return
The rate of compound interest at which the company's outstanding investment is repaid by proceeds from the project.
Failure recovery
The set of actions that are taken after then negative effects of failure have occurred that reduce the impact of negative effects
Corporate Culture
The set of important assumptions that members of the company share. It is a system of shared values about what is important and beliefs about how the company works. These common assumptions influence the ways the company operates.
Local Measures
The set of measurements that relates to a resource, operation, process, or part and usually has low correlation to global organization measures. Examples are errors per printed page, departmental efficiency, and volume discounts.
Corporate Strategy
The strategy of an enterprise that identifies how a company will function in its environment. Such as how to satisfy customers, how to grow business, how to compete, how to achieve financial objectives.
Cost-volume profit analysis
The study of how profits change with various levels of output and selling price.
Net Income
The surplus of income over expenses shown in the income statement.
Strategic Group Mapping
The technique used to illustrate different market or competitive positions that rival firms occupy.
Strategic Group Mapping
The technique used to illustrate different market or competitive positions that rival firms occupy. A company can use this tool to show possible changes in the positions of it's rivals.
Key Success Factors (KSF)
The things that a company needs to get right to be a successful competitor; product and service attributes, processes, costs, resources, capabilities
Delivery Lead Time
The time from the receipt of a customer order to the delivery of the product. Synonym: Delivery cycle
Velocity (enabler - performance indicator)
The time taken to produce an amount of output. As wasteful activities are removed, so is the time required.
Operations Strategy
The total pattern of decisions that shape the long-term capabilities of an operation and their contribution to overall strategy. Operations strategy should be consistent with overall strategy. See: Strategic Plan
Activity based management
The use of activity based costing information about cost pools and drivers, activity analysis, and business processes to identify business strategies; improve product design, manufacturing, and distribution, and remove waste from operations.
ABM - Activity Based Management
The use of activity-based costing information about cost pools and drivers, activity analysis, and business processes to identify business strategies; improve product design, manufacturing, and distribution; and remove waste from operations. See: Activity-based Cost Accouting
Perceived value
The value the market gives to a product that may not bear relation to cost. What customers are willing to pay.
Balanced Scorecard
There are factors beyond financial performance that need to be measured. Financial performance measures, internal process performance measures, customer performance measures, learning and growth measures. Single report.
Economies of scale
These are natural to suppliers due to volume over any of their customers as a result of manf. components for and providing services provided to many customers.
Order Qualifiers
Those competitive characteristics that a firm must exhibit to be a viable competitor in the market place.
Order Winners
Those competitive characteristics that cause a firm's customers to choose their product over the competition.
Inventory turns, employees to output ratio, market share
Three ways to benchmark your company with a competitor
TBC
Time-Based Competition
Sustainability
To meet needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
Horizontal Structure
Top mgmt strategic decisions, collaborative chain of authority, cross functional teams, flexible job descriptions, encouraged employee decision making, high org flexibility
Hierarchical Structure
Top mgmt strategic decisions, top-down chain of authority, functional supply chain mgmt, highly structured job definitions, low employee decision making, low org flexibility
SWOT Phase 3
Translate findings and conclusions into potential actions for improving strategy & business prospects. 1. Strengthen competitive capabilities. 2. Pursue market opportunities with greatest potential. 3. Reduce the company's competitive weaknesses and liabilities. 4. Use strengths to limit impact of external threats.
SWOT step 3
Translate findings and conclusions into potential actions for improving strategy; strengthen competitive capabilities, pursue market opportunities, reduce competitive weakness, limit impact of threats
HOQ steps: Product Design
Translate technical requirements into component characteristics.
Control Charts
Upper and lower limits, show the performance of many samples of a process taken over time.
Market positioning
Use strategic group mapping technique: 1. Price and quality of goods and services sold 2. Distribution channels 3. Product and service features that appeal to different market segments
Cross subsidization
Used to attack a rival's home market or main profit sanctuary and selectively attack rivals in different country markets to improve market share. Can come from product lines in the same country, not necessarily home market or profit sanctuary.
The Malcolm Bridge National Quality Award
Uses a broad set of critera to evaluate and award quality mgmt
Environmentally unstable situation
Using natural resources faster than they can be replenished
Economy of scope
Using one versatile plant to produce many different products at a lower cost than making each product in different plants at a higher cost.
Insourcing
Using the firm's internal resources to provide goods and services. See: Make-or-Buy Decision
Benchmarking
Usually completed by third party bench marking service that aggregate data by converting it into average cost per activity or publish raw date to determine price position relative to rivals.
Batch manufacturing
Usually produces multiple units of discrete product at at time. Small batch similar to jobbing. Large batch similar to repetitive processes.
Employee Involvement
Utilize the brain power of all employees but also to develop their skills, create ownership, and sense of pride enabling managers to manage and not fight fires.
Tools used to analyze price competitiveness
Value chain analysis, ABC costing, and bench marking
Companies need to align _________ and _____ with selected competitive business strategy.
Value chain and operations strategies
How to determine price competitiveness
Value chain cost analysis, ABC analysis of value chain costs, benchmarking rival costs
Best Cost Provider
Value for money. Aim is to provide that little extra value at a very good price. The product versions will include extra features at a reasonable price. Long term, additional features at lower cost than competitor.
Intellectual Property
Various legal entitlements that attach to certain names, written and recorded media, and inventions.
Business level
Vertical integration is a strategic move at the______________
VOC
Voice of Customer
Key Success Factors
What a company needs to get right in order to be a successful competitor; technology, manf. distribution, marketing, capabilities, customer service.
Detailed routings and CRP
What is not used in project manufacturing?
Spare parts, warranty, guarantees
What must be forecasted in the phase out phase of the product life cycle?
P&IM and block scheduling
What should be used in project manufacturing?
Maturity
What stage of the product life cycle incorporates trends and seasonality?
Licensing
When a company has a patented process or product but lacks org. and financial resources to enter a foreign market
S&OP
When is functional strategy turned into reality?
Routing
Where the product is made. Sequence of operations, methods used, time, tooling needed, and BOM evaluations.
Strategic Group Mapping reveals
Which companies are close or distant competitors in terms of competitive characteristics; price, quality, geographic coverage
Introduction
Which phase in the product life cycle is the most difficult?
Sequential Approach (alt. operations strategy)
Works on the principle that the company can only concentrate on one of the five strategic objectives at a time (cost, quality, speed, dependability, flexibility).
Speed
______of design means competitive edge.
Franchising strategy for market entry
advantages: 1. Low cost and risk of setting up and operating 2. Franchisor selects, trains, support and monitor franchisee Drawback: 1. Cultural differences leads to different quality concerns 2. Modify product to satisfy local taste may be detrimental to the brand
Payback period
amount invested / expected annual net cash inflow
Target cost
are costs which need to be achieved to reach certain market share levels
Repetitive manufacturing
cell layout, product layout. Production activities repetitive and predictable. Very high volume with little variety. Auto assembly line.
Jobbing manufacturing
functional layout, cell layout, service shop. Resources such as equipment and labor are shared among tasks but achieve different results for different products. Very low repetition and many products are one of a kind. Wide variety of routings. High worker skill required. Specialist tool making.
Five forces analysis
is a tool to analyze the principal competing pressures in a market
Contribution margin
is calculated by subtracting variable costs from revenue. It is an improved way of managing the business from an internal operations viewpoint. It cannot be a substitute for full absorption accounting for reporting to the "outside" world.
Economic Value Added (EVA)
measures the net profit over the cost of all the capital used to create that profit. There are three ways that EVA can be raised. 1. Earn more profit without using more capital 2. Use less capital - most companies find ways to do this 3. Invest capital in higher return projects
Concurrent engineering
participative design / engineering. Defines it as a concept that refers to the participation of all functional areas of the firm in the product design activity. Suppliers and customers included.
Project crashing
the assignment of additional resources to one or more critical activities in order to shorten the project time lines.
Debt ratio
total liabilities / total assets = measures the ability to pay off loans ability is higher if ratio is lower