Operation Supply Chain Management
What are phases in product design?
1. feasibility analysis 2. product specification 3. process specification 4. prototype development 5. design review 6. market test 7. product introduction 8. follow up evaluation
Tactics
method and actions taken to accomplish strategies
least squares line
minimize the sum of the squared vertical deviations around the line
Environmental scanning
monitoring of events and trends that present threats or opportunities for a company
weighted average
more recent values in a series are given more weight in computing a forecast
Research and Development
organized effort to increase scientific knowledge or product innovation
delayed differentiation
the process of producing, but not quite completing, a product or service until customer preferences are known
indifference point
the quantity that would make two alternatives equivalent
tracking signal
the ratio of cumulative forecast error to the corresponding value of MAD. used to forecast
product liability
the responsibility of a manufacturer for any injuries or damages caused by a faulty product
normal operating condition
the set condition under which an item's reliability is specified
Core competencies
the special attributes or abilities that give an organization a competitive edge
Lead time
the time between ordering goods or service and receiving it
computer aided manufacturing
the use of computers in process control
breakeven point
the volume of output at which total cost and total revenue are equal
time series
time-ordered sequence of observation taken at regular intervals
Lean system
uses minimal amounts of resources to produce high volume of high quality goods with some variety
focus forecasting
using the forecasting method that demonstrates the best recent success
Which of the following is not a characteristic of layout decisions in system design?
usually well received by operative personnel
predictor variables
variables that can be used to predict values of the variable of interest
trend adjusted exponential smoothing
variation of exponential smoothing used when a time series exhibits a linear trend
cycle
wakelike variations lasting more than one year
Production and distribution decisions focus on
what customers want, when they want it, and how much is needed.
NAFTA opened boarders of trade between who?
U.S., Canada and Mexico
Which of the following is not a basic question in capacity planning?
Who will pay for it?
Pareto phenomenon
a few factors account for a higher percentage of the occurrence of some events
naive forecast
a forecast for any period that equals the previous period actual value
modular design
a form of standardization in which component parts are grouped into modules that are easily replaced or interchanged
standard error of estimate
a measure of the scatter of points around a regression line
correlation
a measure of the strength and direction of relationship between two variables
service blueprint
a method used in service design to describe and analyze a proposed service
centered moving average
a moving average positioned at the center of the data that were used to compute it
uniform commercial code
a product must be suitable for its intended purpose
Supply chain
a sequence of activities and organizations involved in producing and delivering goods
mass customization
a strategy of producing basically standardized goods, but incorporating some degree of customization
computer integrated manufacturing
a system for linking a broad range of manufacturing activities through an integrating computer system
control chart
a visual tool for monitoring forecasts errors
exponential smoothing
a weighted averaging method based on previous forecast plus a percentage of the forecast error
The maximum allowable cycle time is computed as:
daily operating time desired by the desired output
what is an End of Life program?
deals with products that have reached the end of their useful lives. the purpose of this program is to reduce the dumping of products, especially electronics
Effective capacity
deign capacity minus allowances such as personal time, equipment maintenance, delays due to scheduling, problems and changing the mix products
The main issue in the design of process layouts for service operations concerns the relative positioning of:
departments
design for assembly
design so that used products can be easily taken apart
design for recycling
design that facilities for recovery of materials and components in used products for reuse
Robust design
design that results in products or services that can function over a broad range of conditions
design for manufacturing
designing of products that are compatible with an organization's capabilities
reverse engineering
dismantling and inspecting a competitor's product to discover product improvements
value analysis
examination of the function of parts and materials in an effort to reduce cost and/or improve product performance
capacity cushion
extra capacity used to offset demand uncertainty
Break even point formula
fixed cost divided by revenue per unit minus variable cost per unit
associative model
forecasting technique that uses explanatory variables to predict future demand
time-series forecasts
forecasts that project patterns identified in recent time-series observations
judgemental forecasting
forecasts that use subjective inputs such as opinions from consumer surveys, sales, staff, managers and experts
flexible manufacturing system
group of machines designed to handle intermittent processing requirements and produce a variety of similar products
Craft production
high skilled workers use simple, flexible tools to produce small quantities of customized goods
When the output is less than the optimal rate of output, the average unit cost will be:
higher
economies of scale
if the output rate is less than the optimal level, increasing the output rate results in decreasing average unit costs
diseconomies of scales
if the output rate is more than the optimal level, increasing the output rate results in increasing average unit costs
Two widely used metrics are?
Mean and standard deviation
What are some ways to improve productivity?
1. Develop productivity measures for all operations 2. Look at system as a whole when deciding which operations are most critical 3. Develop methods for achieving productivity improvements 4. Establish reasonable goals for improvement 5. Make it clear that management supports and encourages improvements 6. Measure improvements and publicize them
What are the key issues for today's business operation?
1. Economic conditions 2. Innovation 3. Quality problems 4. Risk management 5. Competing in a global economy
What are some key external factors?
1. Economic conditions 2. Political conditions 3. Legal environment 4. Technology 5. Competition 6. Markets
Managers use models in a variety of ways, what are some of the reasons?
1. Generally easy to use and less expensive 2. Require users to organize and sometimes quantify information 3. Increase understanding of the problem 4. Enable managers to analyze what if questions 5. Serve as a consistent tool for evaluation 6. Enable users to bring the power of mathematics to bear on a problem
What are some key internal factors?
1. Human resources 2. Facilities and equipment 3. Financial resources 4. Customers 5. Products and services 6. Technology 7. Suppliers 8. Other (patents, equipment, access to resources)
What are some ways that businesses compete?
1. Identifying consumer wants or needs 2. Price and quality 3. Advertising and promotion 4. Product and service design 5. Location 6. Cost 7. Quality 8. Quick response 9. Flexibility 10. Inventory management 11. Supply chain management 12. Service 13. Managers and workers
What are some of the different strategies companies can use?
1. Low cost 2. Scale based 3. Specialization 4. Newness 5. Flexible operations 6. High quality 7. Service 8. Sustainability
What are some of the reasons to manage the supply chain?
1. Need to improve operations 2. Increasing levels of outsourcing 3. Increased transportation costs 4. Competitive pressure 5. Increasing globalization 6. Increasing importance of e-business 7. The complexity of supply chains 8. The need to manage inventories
Why do some organizations fail?
1. Neglecting operations strategy 2. Failing to take advantage of strengths, opportunities. Failing to recognize threats and weaknesses 3. Putting too much emphasis on short term financial goals 4. Placing too much emphasis on product or service designs and not enough on process design 5. Neglecting investments in capital and human resources 6. Failing to establish good internal communications 7. Failing to consider customer wants and needs
What are some factors that affect productivity?
1. Standardizing 2. Use of the internet 3. Scrap rates (inefficient use of resources) 4. Computer viruses 5. Searching for lost or misplaced items 6. New workers 7. Safety 8. Shortage of tech savvy workers 9. Layoffs 10. Labor turnover 11. Incentive plans
What are the 3 categories of of business process?
1. Upper management process 2. Operational process 3. Supporting process
What are the five principles for thinking ethically?
1. Utilitarian principle (good done by action or inaction) 2. Rights principle (should respect and protect morale rights) 3. Fairness principle (equals should be held and evaluated at the same standards) 4. Common good (actions should contribute to the common good of community) 5. Virtue (honesty, compassion, tolerance and self control)
What are the key questions in capacity planning
1. What kind of capacity is needed? 2. How much is needed to match demand? 3. When is needed?
Operations managers make a number of key decisions that affect the entire organization by asking what questions?
1. What resources will be needed 2. When will each resource be needed 3. Where will the work be done 4. How will the product or service be designed 5. Who will do the work
What types of questions may need to be addressed after examining external and internal factors?
1. What role will the internet play 2. Will the organization have a global presence 3. What will the supply chain management strategy be 4. To what extent will new products be introduced 5. What rate of growth is desirable and sustainable 6. What emphasis should be placed on lean production 7. How will the organization differentiate its products from competition
characteristics of well designed service system
1. being consistent 2. being user friendly 3. being robust if variability is a factor 4. being easy to sustain 5. being cost effective
what are the steps to forecasting?
1. determine the purpose of the forecast 2. establish a time horizon 3. obtain, clean and analyze appropriate data 4. select a forecasting technique 5. make the forecast 6. monitor the forecast error
Factors that give rise to market opportunities and threats?
1. economic 2. social and demographic 3. political, liability, or legal 4. competitive 5. cost or availability 6. technological
major steps in service blueprinting?
1. establish boundaries for service 2. identify and determine the sequence of customer 3. develop time estimates 4. identify potential failure points develop a plan to prevent/minimize them
what is the basic objective of layout design?
1. facilitate attainment of product 2. to use workers and space efficiently 3. to avoid bottlenecks 4. to minimize material handling cost 5. to design for safety
What are the common features of forecasts?
1. forecasting techniques generally that the same underlying casual system 2.forecasts are not perfect 3. forecasts for groups of items tend to be more accurate than forecasts for individual items because forecasting errors may occur 4. forecast accuracy decreases as the time period covered by the forecast-the time horizon-
summarize the two major aspects of process management
1. managing a process to meet demand. Having the right capacity require having accurate forecasts of demand, the ability to translate forecasts into capacity requirements and a process in place capable of meeting expected demand 2. process variation: in addition to variation you have 4 basic sources of variation
What are the elements of a good forecast
1. timely 2. accurate 3. reliable 4. meaningful units 5. in writing 6. simple to understand and use
For fixed costs of $2,000, revenue per unit of $2, and variable cost per unit of $1.60, the break-even quantity is:
5000
Utilization is defined as the ratio of:
Actual output to design capacity
Efficiency is defined as the ratio of:
Actual output to effective capacity.
Which of the following is not a strategy to manage service capacity?
Backordering
explain the importance of learning about operations management
Because it affects every aspect of business, no matter if you're going into operations or another career. Through learning about operations supply chain management you will have a much better knowledge and understanding of the world we live in.
Capacity in excess of expected demand that is intended to offset uncertainty is a:
Capacity cushion
Product-focused, single-piece flow, pull production system would be called a:
Cellular layout
Which of the following is not an approach that companies use to achieve a smooth flow of production?
Companies use all of these
In the area of product and service design, the acronym CAD refers to:
Computer Aided Design
The process of comparing outputs to previously established standards to determine if corrective action is needed is called:
Controlling
Productivity growth formula?
Current productivity-previous productivity divided by previous productivity *100 (84-80/80*100)= 5%
What is it about repetitive processes that make them appropriate for products in the maturity phase of their life cycle?
Efficiency
The type of layout in which workers, materials, and equipment are moved to the product as needed is:
Fixed Position
Who was referred to as the father of scientific management?
Fredrick Winslow
When the output is less than the optimal rate of output, the average unit cost will be:
Higher
describe the operations function and the nature of the operations managers job.
May include but not limited to many interrelated activities such as forecasting, capacity planning, scheduling, managing inventories, assuring quality, motivating employees, and deciding where to locate facilities.
The first, and perhaps most important, step in constraint management is to _________ the most pressing constraint.
Identify
When buying component parts, risk does not include:
Interest rate fluctuations
The method of financial analysis which results in an equivalent interest rate is:
Internal Rate of Return
Supplying operations with parts and materials, performing work on products, and/or performing services are part of the firm's:
Internal Supply Chain
An advantage of a U-shaped production line is that:
It is more efficient than a traditional product layout
Which type of processing system tends to produce the most product variety?
Job Shop
Marketing depends on operations for information regarding:
Lead time
Daily capacity of a product layout is determined by
Operating time divided by cycle time
Productivity equals what?
Output divided by input
Productivity is expressed as:
Output divided by input
Managing the supply chain has become more important as a result of firms increasing their levels of:
Outsourcing
The responsibilities of the operations manager are:
Planning, organizing, staffing, directing, and controlling
identify the similarities and differences between production and service operations
Production of goods results in a tangible output. Service however generally implies an act of some sort. Some of the service jobs are things like professional services, internet, utilities, and barbershops. Manufacturing and service are often done in different terms of what is done but quite similar on how it's done. Many service jobs involve a high degree of customer contact. Services often have a higher degree of labor content than manufacturing jobs do, although automated services are an exception Measurement of productivity can be more difficult for service jobs largely due to the variations of input
formal way to document customer requirements is:
Quality function deployment
Maximum capacity refers to the upper limit of:
Rate of output
Incorporating design for disassembly principles in product design helps firms with ________ design issues
Reuse
Short term considerations in determining capacity requirements include:
Seasonal demand variations
Product design and choice of location are examples of ________ decisions
Strategic
identify the three major functional areas of organizations and describe how they interrelate
The three major areas are operations, finance, and marketing/sales. Finance and operations management personnel cooperate by exchanging information and expertise in such activities like budgeting, investment proposals and provisions of funds. Marketing and production must work closely together to successfully implement design changes to develop and produce new products.
At the break-even point
Total cost equals total revenue
Quality function deployment
an approach that integrate the "voice of the customer" into both product and service developments
bottleneck operation
an operation in a sequence of operations whose capacity is lower than that of the other operations
Schematic models
are more abstract than their physical counterparts, they have less resemblance to their physical reality. Graphs and charts are examples
Mathematical models
are the most abstract
Theory y
assumed that workers enjoy the physical and mental aspects of work and become committed to work
Theory X
assumed workers do not like to work and have to be controlled
The substitution of machinery that has sensing and control devices for human labor is best described by the term:
automation
concurrent engineering
bringing engineering design and manufacturing personnel together early in the design phase
irregular variation
caused by unusual circumstances, not reflective of typical behavior
A product-focused, single-piece flow, pull production system would be called a:
cellular layout
Order winners
characteristics of an organization's goods or services that cause it to be perceived as better than the competition
Order qualifier
characteristics that customers perceive as minimum standards of accept ability to be considered as potential purchase
Theory Z
combined the Japanese approach with such features as lifetime employment, employee problem solving, and consensus building
Computer-integrated manufacturing integrates ______________ with manufacturing.
information from across the organization
Computer-integrated manufacturing integrates ______________ with manufacturing.marketing strateg
information from across the organization
Dephi method
iterative process in which managers and staff complete a series of questionnaires, each developed from the previous one, to achieve consensus forecast
The estimation of costs is generally most difficult when the ___________ process has been chosen.
job shop
fixed position layout
layout in which the product or project remains stationary, and workers, materials, and equipment are moved as needed
product layout
layout that uses standardization processing operations to achieve smooth, rapid, high volume flow
product or service profiling
linking key product or service requirements to process capabilities
trend
long term upward movement in data
Physical model
look like their real life counterparts
numerically controlled machines
machines that perform operations by following mathematical processing instructions
seasonal relative
percentage of average or trend
Strategy
plans for achieving company goals
Bias
president's tendency for forecasts to be greater or less than the actual values of a time series
Which of the following is not a primary concern for process selection?
pricing strategy
Six Sigma
process for reducing costs, improving quality, and increasing customer satisfaction
computer-aided designing
product design using computer graphics
Mission
reason for the company's existence
remanufacturing
refurbishing used by replacing worn-out or defective components
random variation
residual variations after all other behaviors are accounted for
seasonality
short term regular variations related to calendar or time of day
Forecast
statement about the future value of a variable of interest
moving average
technique that averages a number of recent actual values, updated as new values become available
cradle to grave assessment
the assessment of the environment impact of a product or service throughout its useful life
Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD)
the average absolute forecast error
Mean absolute percent error (MAPE)
the average absolute percent error
mean time between failures
the average length of time between failures of a product or component
Mean Squared Error (MSE)
the average of squared forecast errors
manufacturability
the capability of an organization to produce an item at an acceptable profit
serviceability
the capability of an organization to provide a service at an acceptable cost or profit
Value added
the difference between the cost of inputs and the value or price of outputs
service delivery system
the facilities, processes, and skills needed to provide a service
availability
the fraction of time piece of equipment is expected to be available for operation
group technology
the grouping into part families of items with similar designs or manufacturing characteristics
Operations Management
the management of systems or processes that create goods and provide services
Design capacity
the maximum designed service capacity or output rate
service package
the physical resources needed to perform the service, the accompanying goods, and the explicit and implicit services