OMIS 430 - TEST 1 SLU - WAIKAR
decision theory and its tools is appropriate only if business problem.situation is characterized by:
- a set of future conditions called states of nature - a set of alternatives - resulting payoffs associated with a given choice under a given state of nature are estimable - probabilities of occurrence of the states of nature are estimable
what are the 3 types of business environments that POM decisions are made in?
- certainty - risk - uncertainty
steps of EMV
- construct the payoff table - compute EMV for each alternative - choose the alternative associated with highest EMV
what are the 2 steps for making decisions under risk?
- identify - the alternatives - states of nature - probabilities - payoffs -apply EMV criteria OR use the decision tree approach to decide the best choice or alternative
the standard decision-making process involves:
- identifying the problem - specifying criteria for choosing a solution - developing alternatives - analyzing and comparing the alternatives - selecting the best alternatives - implementing it and monitoring the results
what are the 3 main basic functions in most organizations?
- operations - finance - marketing
managers must make decisions related to ...
- system design - system operation
what are the 3 main characteristics of production systems?
- type of setup - variety - volume
operations decisions may be characterized by?
- use of models - use of quantitative approaches - use of trade-offs - use of system approach - need for establishing priorities - ethics
relatively few (20%) items, variables, factors generally account for the lion's share (80%) of the problems
80-20 rule
what is the MAXIMUM amount a manager should be willing to pay to obtain perfect information?
EVPI
T/F decision tree approach can be used to choose the best alternative under the conditions of risk
TRUE
T/F interaction of operations function with other functions, not individually?
TRUE
T/F operations managers have an obligation to make "ethical decisions"
TRUE
T/F operations managers must pay attention to the impact of their decisions on their workers, their customers, other people and the environment
TRUE
T/F perfect information is desirable but costs money
TRUE
T/F perfect information moves you from risk to certainty
TRUE
T/F the information presented in a decision tree is not different from information in payoff table
TRUE
T/F the more variety, the greater the variation in production/service requirement
TRUE
creating and imposing bounds on decision making due to limited resources and rationalizing them
bounded rationality
decision tree approach involves construction of a decision tree for your ...
business situation
everything is known
certainty
(in a decision tree) used to indicate states of nature or chance events
circular nodes
what is also dictated by volume of production and may range from a project type operation (very low volume) to job shop (batch processing), to repetitive production (assembly line) to continuous processing which involves producing high volumes of highly uniform products with high degree of automation
classification
- linear programming - queuing theory - inventory models - project management tools - forecasting techniques - simulation - decision theory tools
common quantitative techniques
a graphical representation of all the alternatives available, all states of nature, their probabilities and estimated payoffs
decision tree
what approach will only work in sequential decision making
decision tree approach
breaking up production process into small tasks so that each worker performs a small portion of the overall job, better and more efficiently mass production concepts
division of labor
solving more important problems first since many resources are scare
establishing priorities
what is the highest EMV in the table also called?
expected payoff under risk
what are important aspects of conversion for assuring effectiveness and efficiency?
feedback and control
- providing funds for operations/marketing
finance
- who will work on what?
forecasting, scheduling
act in a way you would expect others to act towards you
golden rule
output may range from ...
highly standardized with high degree of uniformity to customized output
- operators - supervisors - clerks - etc.
human labor
- time standards - process charts
information
product parts need not be custom fitted, making replacement easy and cutting cost
interchangeable parts
- do we have enough today?
inventory management
act in such a way that the action taken under the circumstances could be a universal law or rule of behavior
kant's categorical imperative principle
choose the alternative with the best average payoff
laplace rule
how does operation manager fulfill their ultimate responsibility?
make decision in a variety of areas
- motivation - training - performance
management of personnel
what are types of setup?
manufacturing and service
- promoting and/or selling goods and services
marketing
choose the alternative with the best of the best possible payoffs
maximax rule
choose the alternative with the best of the worst possible payoff
maximin rule
choose the alternative that minimizes you maximum regret
minimax regret rule
abstraction of reality
model
what can be inexpensive and easy to use?
models
what permits experimentation but can have limitations
models
decision tree consists of ...
nodes and branches
- creation of goods/services - part of the supply chain
operations
part of the organization that produces goods or services using a set of activities
operations
what can be described as a process of transformation of inputs into outputs ?
operations
managing these activities in the system that create goods or provide services
operations management (OM/POM)
only take actions that would be viewed as proper by a disinterest panel of professional peers
professional ethics
- project on time? - any adjustments?
project management
allows POM managers to obtain solution to business problems mathematically
quantitative approaches
what is the ultimate responsibility of the operations manager?
real responsibility of production/operations manager is to product quality products or services in cost-effective and timely manner
we do not know what will happen but know its likelihood
risk
- plan - organize - direct - control - make decisions - follow thru - improve
role of operations manager
moving assembly line
scientific management
(in a decision tree) used to indicate decision points
square nodes
occurs when different departments attempt to reach a solution that is optimum for their department and not what is optimum for the entire organization
suboptimization
- before production can begin - involves determining system parameters
system design
- production itself - concerned with: - management of personnel - inventory management - forecasting, scheduling - project management - quality control - quality assurance
system operation
embracing the philosophy that "whole is greater than the sum of the component individual parts"
systems approach
- robots - machines
technology
what adds value during operations transformation?
the conversion
implies inability to achieve all goals and thus compromising in various areas for overall best
trade-offs
act in such a way that you would feel comfortable explaining your actions on national tv news show
tv test
- human labor - raw materials, sub-assemblies, capital - technology - information - time
types of input
- goods of different types - services of different types
types of outputs
everything is unknown
uncertainty
what can also contribute to poor decisions and bad outcomes
unwillingness to admit a mistake
act in a way that results in the greatest good for the greatest number
utilitarian principle
- utilitarian principle - professional ethics - golden rule - kant's categorical imperative principle - tv test
ways to assess managerial decisions in the context of ethics