COB 300 Operations Test 2 Review (Yuyun Zhong)
Manufacturing Cell
-A manufacturing cell is a dedicated area where products that are similar in processing requirements are produced. -Formed by allocating dissimilar machines to cells that are designed to work on similar products (shape, processing, etc.) -A firm may have many different cells in a production area, each set up to produce a single product/a similar group of products ex: computer chip manufacturing
Control chart
-A time ordered plot of representative sample statistics obtained from an ongoing process (e.g. sample means), used to distinguish between random and nonrandom variability -Each point on the control chart represents a sample of "n" observations
Cost of inspection
-Interruptions of process/delay -Destructive testing
break-even analysis
-Model seeks to determine the point in units produced where a company will start making profit on the process -Model seeks to determine the point in units produced where total revenue and total cost are equal
How to determine initial control limits
-Obtain 20 to 25 samples -Compute appropriate sample statistics for each sample (e.g., mean) -Establish preliminary control limits -Plot the data on the control chart and check for patterns -Determine if any points fall outside of the control limits -If you find no out-of-control signals, assume the process is in control -If you find an out-of-control signal, search for and correct the assignable cause of variation -Resume the process and collect another set of observations on which to base control limits
Cost of passing defectives
-Reputation damage -Demand decrease -Handling product returns/recalls
Work Center
-similar equipment or functions are grouped together -A part being worked on travels from work center to work center -Work center = Department -Arrange work centers in a way that optimizes the movement of material. -Place work centers with large interdepartmental traffic adjacent to each other ex: hospital procedure
A manufacturer has three options for obtaining a machined part: 1. Buy the part at $200 per unit; no fixed cost. 2. Make the part on a numerically controlled semiautomatic lathe at $75 per unit; fixed cost is $80,000. 3. Make the part on a machining center at $15 per unit; fixed cost is $200,000. Assume that we sell the part at $300/unit. A) What would be the best choice if expected demand were: 500 units? 1,000 units? 2,500 units? Which option should the manufacturer choose?
1. (Buy the part): $200 x Demand 2. (Make the part on a semiautomatic lathe) = $80,000 + ($75 x Demand) 3. (Make the part on a machining center). $200,000 + ($15 x Demand) Lets compute: (FC1 -FC2) / (VC1-VC2) $200x = $80,000 + 75x $125x = $80,000 = 640 Units $80,000 + 75x = $200,000 + $15x 60x = 120,000 = 2000 units So, anything below 640 units it would be cheaper to buy. Anything between 640 units and 2000 units it would be cheaper to make using the semiautomatic lathe. Anything above 2000 units, it would be cheaper to make using the machine center.
TQM Approach
1. Find out what the customer wants 2. Design a product or service that meets or exceeds customer wants 3. Design processes that facilitate doing the job right the first time 4. Keep track of results 5. Extend these concepts throughout the supply chain 6. Top management must be involved and committed
Inspection Issues
1. How much to inspect and how often 2. At what points in the process to inspect 3. Whether to inspect in a centralized or on-site location 4. Whether to inspect attributes (count the number of times something occurs) or variables (measure the value of a characteristic)
Benchmarking Process
1. Identify a critical process that needs improvement 2. Identify an organization that excels in this process 3. Contact that organization 4. Analyze the data 5. Improve the critical process
How are production process organized?
1. Project Layout 2. Work Center 3. Manufacturing Cell 4. Assembly Line 5. Continuous Improvement
Steps of Production Process
1. source the parts needed 2. make the product 3. deliver the product
Six Sigma
A business process for improving quality, reducing costs, and increasing customer satisfaction Statistically: -Having no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities in any process, product, service -99.99966% of the area is within six standard deviations Conceptually: -Program designed to reduce defects -Requires the use of certain tools and techniques
cause and effect diagram
A diagram used to search for the cause(s) of a problem; also called fishbone diagram.
Total Quality Management (TQM)
A philosophy that involves everyone in an organization in a continual effort to improve quality and achieve customer satisfaction -Continuous improvement -Involvement of everyone in the organization -Customer satisfaction
Quality Control
A process that evaluates output relative to a standard and takes corrective action when output doesn't meet standards ♦ If results are acceptable no further action is required ♦ Unacceptable results call for correction action
ISO 14000
A set of international standards for assessing a company's environmental performance
Project Layout
A setup in which the product remains at one location, and equipment is moved to the product. ex: Making a movie, airplanes, houses
DMAIC
A six-sigma process: define, measure, analyze, improve, and control.
external failure costs
All costs incurred to fix problems that are detected after the product/service is delivered to the customer E.g., handling of complaints, replacements, liability/litigation, payments to customers or discounts used to offset the inferior quality, loss of customer goodwill, and opportunity costs related to lost sales.
Inspection
An appraisal activity that compares goods or services to a standard ♦ Purpose: provide information on the degree to which items conform to a standard ♦ For well-designed processes, little is necessary ♦ Outsourcing: inspection can be significant
process variability
Are the variations random? Yes The process is stable No The process is unstable
Discrete process
Assembly line (e.g., toys, appliances, automobiles)
Where to inspect in the process
Before production 1. Raw materials and purchased parts After production 2. Finished products During production 3. Before a costly operation 4. Before an irreversible process 5. Before a covering process
Dimensions of Quality
Categories that customers use to judge the quality of a product
Assemble to order
Combine a number of preassembled modules to meet a customer's specifications ex: dell computers
Continuous Process
Continuous process (e.g., chemicals, petroleum)
mean chart
Control chart used in monitoring the central tendency of some characteristic within a sample, also known as an x-bar chart in reference to the plotting of averages.
internal failure costs
Costs incurred to fix problems that are detected before the product/service is delivered to the customer. E.g., lost production time, scrap and rework, possible equipment damage, and possible employee injury
Assembly Line
Designed for the special purpose of building a product by going through a series of progressive steps ex: car production
Capability Analysis
Determines whether the inherent variability of the process output falls within the acceptable range of the variability allowed by the design specifications for the process output A process should be both in control and within specifications before production begins
Approaches to Quality Assurance
In order from least progressive to most progressive Inspection Alone - Inspection Process Control - Inspection and Corrective action during production Continuous Improvement - Quality built into the process
Ease-of-Use and user instructions
Increase the likelihood that a product will be used for its intended purpose and in such a way that it will continue to function properly and safely
quality of design
Intention of designers to include or exclude features in a product or service
ISO
International Organization for Standardization
Performance
Main characteristics of the product
Make to order
Make the customer's product from raw materials, parts, and components ex: some restaurants
Information
Operations data or information ex: accurate and useful information provided about the product to the customer
ISO 24700
Pertains to the quality and performance of office equipment that contains reused components
Process Capability Index
Process Capability Index: Used to assess the ability of a process to meet specifications -For a process to be deemed capable, it must have a capability index of at least 1.00 -The current trend is to aim for an index of at least 1.33
implicit services
Psychological benefits the customer may sense only vaguely ex: customer service, is my payment information secured, good atmosphere
On-Site
Quicker decisions are rendered Avoid introduction of extraneous factors Quality at the source
Variation
Random (Common Cause) variation: Natural variation in the output of a process, created by countless minor factors Assignable (special cause) variation: A variation whose cause can be identified A nonrandom variation
Six Sigma Principles
Reduction in variation is an important goal The methodology is data driven; it requires data validation Outputs are determined by inputs Only a critical few inputs have a significant impact on outputs
ISO 9000
Set of international standards on quality management and quality assurance, critical to international business
Centralized
Specialized tests that may best be completed in a lab More specialized testing equipment More favorable testing environment
Statistical Process Control (SPC)
Statistical evaluation of the output of a process Helps us to decide if a process is "in control" or if corrective action is needed
after-sales service
Taking care of issues and problems that arise after the sale
Pareto Chart
Technique for classifying problem areas according to degree of importance, and focusing on the most important Pareto principle (80/20 rule): 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes
Quality
The ability of a product or service to consistently meet or exceed customer expectations
quality of conformance
The degree to which goods or services conform to the intent of the designers
facilitating goods
The material purchased by the buyer or the items provided to the customer ex: consistency and quality of the product
supporting facility
The physical resources that must be in place before a service can be offered ex: location (is it centrally located?)
T/F: Services with high customer contact are more difficult to control
True
Control Limits
Upper and lower control limits define the range of acceptable variation Suppose we establish the Upper Control Limits (UCL) and the Lower Control Limits (LCL) with plus or minus 3 standard deviations. Based on this we can expect 99.7% of our sample observations to fall within these limits.
When to use a c-chart
Use only when the number of occurrences per unit of measure can be counted; non-occurrences cannot be counted. Scratches, chips, dents, or errors per item Cracks or faults per unit of distance Breaks or Tears per unit of area Bacteria or pollutants per unit of volume Calls, complaints, failures per unit of time
When to use a P-Chart
When observations can be placed into two categories. Good or bad Pass or fail Operate or don't operate When the data consists of multiple samples of several observations each
When to use Cp
When the process is centered at its target value
When to use Cpk
When the process is not centered at its target value
Engineer to order
Work with the customer to design and then make the product ex: aircrafts
service package
a bundle of goods and services that is provided in some environment
Histogram
a chart of an empirical frequency distribution
P-chart
a chart used for controlling the proportion of defective services or products generated by the process
Range chart
a control chart based on the range (from the highest to the lowest values) of the samples taken
scatter diagram
a graph that shows the degree and direction of relationship between two variables
Control Chart
a statistical chart of time-ordered values of a sample statistic
Check Sheet
a tool for recording and organizing data to identify a problem
Aesthetic
appearance, feel, smell, taste, etc.
explicit services
benefits readily observable by customer and an essential feature of the service ex: is the company legit? did I get what I ordered?
Dimensions of Service Quality
categories that customers use to judge the quality of a service
Reliability
consistency of performance
How do we make decisions?
cost vs benefit
Failure Costs
costs caused by defective parts or products or by faulty services
Determinants of Quality
decisions that impact ability of product or service to consistently meet or exceed customer expectations
Centralized vs On-site inspection
effects on cost and level of disruption are a major issue in selecting centralized vs. on-site inspection
specification (tolerances)
established by engineering design or customer requirements. They indicate a range of values in which individual units of output must fall in order to be acceptable.
special features
extra characteristics
Servicability
handling of complaints or repairs
conformance
how well the product conforms to design specifications
percieved quality
indirect evaluation of quality
assurance
knowledge exhibited by personnel and their ability to convey trust and confidence
expectency
meet (or exceed) customer expectations
Consistency
quality doesn't vary
apprasial costs
relate to inspection, testing, and other activities intended to uncover defective products or services, or to assure that there are none E.g., Cost of inspectors, testing, test equipment, labs, quality audits, field testing
Make to stock
serve customers from finished goods inventory ex: packaged food
Prevention Costs
sum of all the costs to prevent defects E.g., training, quality control procedures, extra attention in both design and production phases
reliability
the ability to perform a service dependably, accurately, and consistently
Consistency
the ability to provide the same level of good quality repeatedly
tangibles
the appearance of physical facilities, equipment, personnel, and communication materials
convenience
the availability and accessibility of the service
Process Capability
the inherent variability of process output relative to the variation allowed by the design specification
extent of contact
the percentage of time the customer must be in the system relative to service time
Customer contact
the physical presence of the customer in the system
time
the speed in which the service is delivered
Lead time
the time needed to respond to a customer order
durability
the useful life of the product
courtsey
the way customers are treated by employees
c-chart
used when products or services can have more than one defect.
Customer order decoupling point
where inventory is positioned to allow entities in the supply chain to operate independently
Responsiveness
willingness to help customers in unusual situations and to deal with problems