Operations Management- C215
Push moves the product forward in anticipation for demand pull eliminates excessive inventory (remember that because you only take what you can to process not what is being forced or pushed to you)
Difference between the push and pull processes
manufacturing organizations must maintain tangible inventory avoid keeping large amount of inventory servicing organizations do not maintain inventory
Differences between Manufacturing and Servicing Organizations
If you don't already offer flexibility, start to do so Look for opportunities to automate Game the system Keep in touch Increase responsibility Don't skimp on training and development Show your gratitude
Eliminating Employee Boredom
tangibility, reliability, assurance, responsiveness, and empathy
Five Dimensions of Quality
Prevention, Appraisal, Internal Failure and External Failure
Four Costs of Quality
what to order how much to order when to order when to deliver when to replenish
MRP uses the concept of backward scheduling to determine activity start dates to include
Design Capacity Effective Capacity Capacity Utilization
Measuring Capacity
Kaoro Ishikawa-Fishbone Diagram Joseph Juran- Fitness for use Philip Crosby- Quality is Free Genich Taguchi- Taguchi function, design laws of quality W Edward Deming- 14 points
Quality Gurus and their contributions to TQM
Six Sigma, Lean, and Agile
Quality management tools such as _________, __________ and ___________ focus on identifying root causes of quality problems throughout the entire organization and correcting them at the source
Supply chain
Reliability Flexibility expenses and assets/utilization
DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control)
Six Sigma and its 5 step Plan
perfect product at all times nothing can be 100% but it meets the six deviations no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities(DPMO) this is the number that the quality strives in six sigma after 3 deviations, it just gets smaller and smaller
Six Sigma in practice
standards, procedures
Sources of Variation
Warehouse Office
Special Cases of Processes
(1) gather information about space needs, space availability, and closeness requirements of departments; (2) developing a block plan or schematic of the layout; (3) developing a detailed layout.
Steps in Designing Process Layouts
Brainstorming Defining the Product Conducting the User Research Sketching Prototyping Compiling Specifications Producing the Factory Samples Sample Testing
Steps in Product Design
Step 1: Establish the Necessary Processes with the Right Staff. ... Step 2: Ensure Complete and Up-to-Date Project Data. ... Step 3: Identify the Actually Available Capacities. ... Step 4: Consolidate Capacities and Requirements.
Steps in making Capacity Decision
Step 1 Identify Dominant Location Factors. In this step managers identify the location factors that are dominant for the business Step 2 Develop Location Alternatives Step 3 Evaluate Location Alternatives
Steps in making Location Decision
Descriptive statistics Statistical process control acceptance sampling
Three Categories of Statistical Quality Control
Process Product Hybrid Fixed-Position
Types of Layouts
a process who has a mean exactly in between the 2 specification limits (meaning halfway between the two will have a Cpk of 1.
What does Process Capability Index represent
it provides the ability to compare available production capabilities to the planned workload provides the ability to compare the actual workload
What is the importance of capacity requirements planning?
Lean Systems
a business approach to holistically apply lean principles to the way it plans, measures, prioritizes and manages work depicts what has been created to minimize waste without sacrificing productivity whole package JIT is part of this system
group technology
a company have a number of facility and each facility is responsible for a particular process ex. one facility manufacturers and another provides servicing
center-of-gravity approach
a manufacturing company decides to open a new distribution center location in order to minimize distribution costs to warehouses or stores. What tool should the manufacturing company use to determine where the new distribution center should be located? includes fixed and variable costs or changing costs, transportation cost
Productivity
a measure of how a company uses its resources output/input
process velocity
a measure of wasted time in the system throughput time/ value - added time
effective capacity
a permanent measure used to achieve design capacity lower than design capacity maximum output rate under normal (realistic) conditions; usually lower than design capacity ex. on average, a bakary can make 20 custom cakes per day
Kanban significance to the pull system
a scheduling system for lean manufacturing specifies the exact quantity of a product that needs to be produced pull system tells you how much to be produced starts when customers order it could be more expensive and custom type of items small lots mean less average inventory and shorten manufacturing lead time push system gives you a forecast forecast how much inventory you going to need
Process
a sequence of events or steps
mean
a statistic that measures the central tendency of a set of data
Material Requirements Planning (MRP)
a system that uses the MRP, inventory record data and BOM to calculate material requirements MPS- check to ensure work is feasible determine how much material is needed and bringing in the materials needed BOM- Bill of Material model contains the product structures for each model organized priorities looks at demand and schedules to meet the demand designed to calculate material requirements from dependent demand items
observed time
actual time
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
an information system designed to integrate internal and external members of the supply chain software used to organize and manage processes through information sharing management control decisions can be made quickly systems can be replaced and eliminated resulting in save money reduction in inventory reduction in number of staffs increased production better order management reduce purchasing costs better cashflow reduction logistics and transportation costs customers are happier due to on-time deliveries
Respect for people
and element of JIT that considers human resources an an essential part of the JIT philosophy third basic element of JIT first element in TQM and second is JIT manufacturing
you are shipping finished goods, if they are sold, it is sunk costs
at which stage of the firms inventory management system would the statement "percentage of line items shipped on schedule" be used?
Throughput time/value-added time
average amount of product takes to move through the system the time it takes from raw materials to finished goods
common causes or random
causes that cannot be identified these causes are unavoidable they are caused by slight differences in processes
Flowchart
chart showing the sequence of steps in producing the product or service
vertical integration
company acquires another company that is not the same industry ex. Google purchased Motorola IKEA purchased forests in Africa to get their own wood
Horizontal Integration
company acquires another company that is the same industry ex. Facebook acquisition of instagram
finished goods
completed goods from the manufacturing process that have not yet been sold to distributed to end users ex. a manufacturing firm uses warehouses and shippers in their supply chain
Perpetual Review system
constant moving things inventory is going to be updated every transaction
JIT system influence all functional areas within a company
control inventory levels in order to eliminate excess inventory or lower than required inventory companies can reduce waste companies develop new ways to generate revenue
Process Capability
defined as a statistical measure of the inherent process variability of a given characteristic. to assess the ability of a process to meet specifications
break-even analysis
determines the units needed to manufacture in order to break even
ISO 9000
developed to establish agreement on international quality standards TQM process consists of 13 published standards and guidelines these are published and can be used in all industries businesses are to measure themselves against if the criteria are met, then the businesses can become ISO 9000 certified it helps control standard businesses must meet specific values and are audited to those standards comparative to joint commissions who got o hospitals and measures how they do procedures environmental systems standards measure emissions, effluents and other waste systems
duration of the change
duration represents length of stay how long does the change last or stay
service location decision
factors affecting include: proximity to customers quality of life issues
revised or implemented new operations
follow up to make sure the new operation resolves quality problems
scatter diagram
graph that show how two variables are related to each other
control chart
graph that shows whether a sample of data falls within the common or normal range of variation
Philosophy of TQM
is a comprehensive system for achieving continuous improvement in customer satisfaction. It is a philosophy of total integration of the business to achieve the required result. The goal is to achieve greater efficiency and effectiveness, lower operating cost and increased market share
labor specialization
is most often known as the division of labor and refers to a process in business in which large tasks are divided into smaller tasks, and different employees or different groups of employees complete those tasks.
Plan-To-Do-Study-Act Cycle
is shorthand for testing a change — by planning it, trying it, observing the results, and acting on what is learned. This is the scientific method, used for action-oriented learning.
status of overall customer satisfaction support supply chain objectives
it measures efficiency overall customer service is important
checklist
list of common defects and the number of observed occurrences of these defects
proximity to customers
major factor in the decision to locate a business near its primary market territory
the marketing plan provides insights into operations goals and activities for the eyar aggregate- everything together taking all different components and putting them together tell the other departments what their goals, sales quarters, etc are for the upcoming period
marketing plan essential to the creation of aggregate plan
design capacity
maximum output rate attainable under ideal conditions ex. a bakery can make 30 custom cakes per day when pushed at holiday time
center of gravity
means placing yourself in the middle ex. take all the people with whom business you do the business and put yourself in the middle of it location in the middle and circle around it
capacity utilization
measures how much of the available capacity is actually being used measures effectiveness use eithe effective or design capacity denomination
Efficiency
measures performance relative to a standard actual output/standard output
Capacity Requirements Planning (CRP)
method used to calculate the production capacity availability need to look at how much capacity is available uses planned orders releases from the MRP output to calculate the workload *think about how much capacity do you need to make 100 cakes per day. Can you do this in your home?
job enrichment
motivational tool used to give employees greater satisfaction in their work ex. giving an employee an additional work reserved for more skilled or manager level employees
SCOR Supply Chain Operations Reference
name of the model that has been created to examine the four different supply chain
determine the quantity and timing of material requirements and to keep schedule priorities updated and valid
objective of MRP
Periodic Review System
physical verification ex. done every friday of the month. The inventory will be physically counted on that specified day
to manage the demand for promised deliveries
primary purpose in using the master production schedule in the marketing department of an organization manage the demand of delivery system because the objective is to manage not to create something new
Project process
process used to make a one a a time product exactly to customer specifications
Repetitive Processes
process used to produce one or a few standardized products in high volume. Ex. a production line making nothing but Oreo cookies
conducting a location analysis
proximity to sources of supply site consideration
focuses on customer driven quality manage inventory levels satisfied the customer through product availability
role of Marketing in JIT
forward scheduling
schedule that determines the earliest possible completion date for a job starts as soon as the job is received
infinite loading
scheduling that calculates the capacity needed at work centers in the time period needed without regard to the capacity available to do the work entails working backwards ex. if the customer needs X products build in Y time, we tell customer what the end result is and identify the resources needed to get there
finite loading
scheduling that loads work centers up to a predetermined amount of capacity entails working forward calculation of capacity is based on the capacity available start and finish time of each activity ex. a doctor can spend 10 minutes with a patient, they can schedule 6 patients per hour
Job Design
specifies the work activities or contents of the job doesn't have anything to do with people
ISO 14000
standards for evaluating a company's environmental responsibility three major areas: management systems standards measure systems development an integration of environmental responsibility into the overall business operations standards include the measurement of consumption of natural resources and energy
an organization can designate employees to communicate alternative ways to complete a job in a methods analysis helps make business better identify different ways to communicate
suggestions for improving the operation
Tier One Supplies
supplier supplies directly to the processor supplies component (automobiles) tot he manufacturer (that's the start)
Tier two suppliers
supplier supplies directly to tier one supplies a lot of non automotive customers they do not have the ability or desire to produce automobile parts. They are not supplying actual parts of automobile to manufacturer
Tier Three suppliers
supplies directly to tier two supplier directly supplies materials or services to a processing and packaging plant suppliers of raw materials like plastic
below distance model
tells how far the facility location from other stores
termination
the final stage of the project life cycle end of the project after this date, resources can b used for different activities
conception
the first stage of the project life cycle identifies the need for a project ex. a company decides to enter into a new market
execution
the fourth stage of the project life cycle carrying out the activities that make up the project ex. completing the product design, obtaining the material and equipment needed, setting up the process, writing job instructions and making the product
standard time
the length of time it takes to finish a task or complete one's work ex. measure how long it takes a qualified operator to perform a duty of the job requirements under the assumption that the operator is working at a sustainable pace with the proper tools for the process
performance time
the length of time to completion
Utilization
the proportion of time a resource is actually used time a resource used/ time a resource available
External Distributors
the role third party logistics providers play in the supply chain outside the company could include another company transportation, suppliers
Feasibility Analysis
the second stage of product life cycle evaluate expected costs, benefits and risks of the project ex. a company launching a new product- a feasibility study means examining the potential market, the market share, and profits for the new product compared to the costs
Planning
the third stage of the product life cycle analyze the work to be done and develop time estimates for completing each of the activities plan what must be done, by whom and when ex. company must design the new product, source and order the materials, choose process, design layout, do a pilot run, evaluate the process and transistion to manufacturing
Six Sigma
the use of technical tools for identify and eliminate the causes of quality problems people involvement-able to use technical tools and solve problems the empirical rule: 3 standard deviations is 3 sigma 6 standard deviations is almost at 100%
compute process velocity
throughput time/value-added time determines speed of process (how fast we are going)
their control over internal operations influence and leverage over supplies
two areas managers should consider in order to adapt to the business dynamics affecting their company
takes a long time to implement and see any benefits requires extensive, often complex training
two common drawbacks of implementing enterprise resource planning
overtime is not a long term solution quality of product due to employee overworked and exhaustion
two reasons a company might be hesitant to provide overtime as a capacity based option
increasing cost effectiveness becoming more efficient
two strategic objectives for every member of the supply chain include
ensure that workers receive multi-functional training develop an incentive system to reward workers for their efforts
two ways management can assist employees focus in JIT processing environment
labor specialization
work system acknowledges the benefits of employee proficiency if an employee is good at doing one thing, they will be asked to keep on doing it