SCM Exam 1 True/False
A cause-and-effect diagram helps identify the source of a problem.
True
A firm's process strategy is its approach to transforming resources into goods and services.
True
A multinational corporation has extensive international business involvements
True
A useful tactic for increasing capacity is to redesign a product in order to get more throughput
True
A value-stream map includes both (1) inventory quantities, and (2) symbols for customers and suppliers.
True
All organizations, including service firms such as banks and hospitals, have a production function.
True
An example of a "hidden" production function is money transfers at banks.
True
An organization's ability to generate unique advantages over competitors is central to a successful strategy implementation
True
Automated storage and retrieval systems are commonly used in distribution facilities of retailers.
True
Between 1980 and 2005, the amount of money (bank deposits, government and corporate debt securities, and equity securities) invested in global capital markets more than tripled.
True
Boeing's development of the 787 Dreamliner is an example of a company obtaining a competitive advantage via product differentiation/innovation
True
By their very nature, projects have a limited lifetime, and that sets project management apart from the management of more traditional activities
True
Changes in capacity may lead, lag, or straddle the demand
True
Continuous improvement is based on the philosophy that any aspect of an organization can be improved.
True
Critical Success Factors are those activities that are key to achieving competitive advantage
True
Decisions that involve what is to be made and what is to be purchased fall under the heading of supply chain management.
True
Design capacity is the theoretical maximum output of a system in a given period under ideal conditions.
True
Errors made within the location decision area may overwhelm efficiencies in other areas
True
Ethical and social dilemmas arise because stakeholders of a business have conflicting perspectives.
True
Ethical issues which can arise in projects include bid rigging, bribery, and "low balling."
True
Every network has at least one critical path
True
Expected output is sometimes referred to as rated capacity.
True
Experience differentiation is an extension of product differentiation, accomplished by using people's five senses to create an experience rather than simply providing a service
True
Fixed costs are those costs that continue even if no units are produced
True
Flexible manufacturing systems, because of easily changed control programs, are able to perform such tasks as manufacturing one-of-a-kind parts economically.
True
For the greatest chance of success, an organization's operations management strategy must support the company's strategy
True
Gantt charts give a timeline for each of a project's activities, but do not adequately show the interrelationships of activities.
True
High-quality products and services are the most profitable.
True
ISO 9000 has evolved from a set of quality assurance standards toward a quality management system.
True
Improved quality can increase profitability via flexible pricing.
True
In PERT analysis, the identification of the critical path can be incorrect if a noncritical activity takes substantially more than its expected time
True
In process-focused facilities, equipment utilization is low.
True
In project management, crashing an activity must consider the impact on all paths in the network
True
In selecting new equipment and technology, decision-makers look for flexibility—the ability to respond with little penalty in time, cost, or customer value.
True
In the past half-century, the number of people employed in manufacturing has more or less held steady, but each manufacturing employee is manufacturing about 20 times as much
True
Intermittent processes are organized around processes.
True
Internal failure costs are associated with scrap, rework, and downtime
True
Kaizen is similar to TQM in that both are focused on continuous improvement.
True
Line employees need the knowledge of TQM tools.
True
NAFTA seeks to phase out all trade and tariff barriers among Canada, Mexico, and the United States.
True
One essential ingredient of mass customization is modular design
True
One limitation of the net present value approach to investments is that investments with identical net present values may have very different cash flows.
True
One of the ways that Just-In-Time (or JIT) influences quality is that by reducing inventory, bad quality is exposed.
True
One phase of a large project is scheduling
True
One reason for global operations is to gain improvements in the supply chain
True
One reason to globalize is to learn to improve operations
True
One reason to study operations management is to learn how people organize themselves for productive enterprise
True
One responsibility of a project manager is to make sure that the project meets its quality goals.
True
One use of camera-and-computer-based vision systems is to replace humans doing tedious and error-prone visual inspection activities.
True
Operations management is the set of activities that create value in the form of goods and services by transforming inputs into outputs.
True
Optical checkout scanners and ATMs are examples of technology's impact on services.
True
Pareto charts are a graphical way of identifying the few critical items from the many less important ones.
True
Philip Crosby is credited with both of these quality catch-phrases: "quality is free" and "zero defects."
True
Price changes are useful for matching the level of demand to the capacity of a facility
True
Process control is the use of information technology to monitor and control a physical process.
True
Processes can be environmentally friendly and socially responsible while still contributing to profitable strategies
True
Production processes are being dispersed to take advantage of national differences in labor costs
True
Productivity is more difficult to improve in the service sector
True
Project managers have their own code of ethics, established by the Project Management Institute
True
Quality circles empower employees to improve productivity by finding solutions to work-related problems in their work area.
True
Service blueprinting is a process analysis technique that focuses on the customer and the provider's interaction with the customer.
True
Slack is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the entire project
True
Some of the operations-related activities of Hard Rock Café include designing meals and analyzing them for ingredient cost and labor requirements.
True
Southwest Airlines' core competence is operations.
True
Students wanting to pursue a career in operations management will find multidisciplinary knowledge beneficial.
True
TQM is important because quality influences all of the ten decisions made by operations managers
True
The ES of an activity that has only one predecessor is simply the EF of that predecessor
True
The PIMS study indicated that high ROI firms tend to have high product quality
True
The World Trade Organization has helped to significantly reduce tariffs around the world.
True
The World Trade Organization helps provide governments and industries around the world with protection from firms that engage in unethical conduct.
True
The assembly line is a classic example of a repetitive process
True
The definition of quality adopted by The American Society for Quality is a customer-oriented definition.
True
The operations manager performs the management activities of planning, organizing, staffing, leading, and controlling of the OM function.
True
The phrase Six Sigma has two meanings. One is statistical, referring to an extremely high process capability; the other is a comprehensive system for achieving and sustaining business success.
True
The relative importance of each of the ten operations decisions depends on the ratio of goods and services in an organization
True
The term focused processes refers to the quest for increased efficiency, whether in goods or services, that results from specialization.
True
The tool that calculates which process has the lowest cost at any specified production volume is a crossover chart.
True
Time-function mapping is a flow diagram with time added to the horizontal axis.
True
To attract and retain global talent, and to expand a product's life cycle, are both reasons to globalize
True
"How much inventory of this item should we have?" is within the critical decision area of managing quality.
False
A decision tree for analyzing capacity would have future demands or market favorability as the decision alternatives.
False
A decision tree indicates at what quantity profit changes from negative to positive
False
A knowledge society is one that has migrated from work based on knowledge to one based on manual work.
False
A process map with the addition of a time axis becomes a process chart
False
A product will always be in the same stage of its product life cycle regardless of the country
False
A project organization works best for an organization when the project resides in only one of its functional areas.
False
Activity times should not be included in a service blueprint
False
An example of the postponement strategy for improving service productivity is having the customer wait until you have sufficient time to serve the customer
False
An improvement in quality must necessarily increase costs.
False
An organization's strategy is its purpose or rationale for an organization's existence
False
Benchmarking requires the comparison of your firm to other organizations; it is not appropriate to benchmark by comparing one of your divisions to another of your divisions.
False
Break-even analysis identifies the volume at which fixed costs and revenue are equal
False
Break-even analysis is a powerful analytical tool, but is useful only when the organization produces a single product
False
Building an additional warehouse is an incremental expansion, not a one-step expansion.
False
Capacity decisions are based on technological concerns, not demand forecasts
False
Conforming to standards is the focus of the product-based definition of quality.
False
Critical success factors and core competencies are synonyms
False
Customer interaction is often high for manufacturing processes, but low for services.
False
Dell's approach to personal computer manufacturing is to use a product focus, which gives the company its low-cost competitive advantage.
False
Deming's writings on quality tend to focus on the customer and on fitness for use, unlike Juran's work that is oriented toward meeting specifications.
False
Firms using the global strategy can be thought of as "world companies
False
For most, if not all organizations, quality is a tactical rather than a strategic issue
False
Harley-Davidson, because it has so many possible combinations of products, utilizes the process strategy of mass customization.
False
Henry Ford is known as the Father of Scientific Management.
False
In order to have a career in operations management, one must have a degree in statistics or quantitative methods.
False
Low-cost leadership is the ability to distinguish the offerings of the organization in any way that the customer perceives as adding value
False
Managers at Arnold Palmer Hospital take quality so seriously that the hospital typically is a national leader in several quality areas—so that continuous improvement is no longer necessary.
False
Manufacturing now constitutes the largest economic sector in postindustrial societies
False
Manufacturing organizations have ten strategic OM decisions, while service organizations have only eight
False
Measuring the impact of a capital acquisition on productivity is an example of multi-factor productivity.
False
Most services are tangible; this factor determines how the ten decisions of operations management are handled differently for goods than for services.
False
NAFTA seeks to phase out all trade and tariff barriers between the United States and Asia.
False
Of the several determinants of service quality, access is the one that relates to keeping customers informed in language they can understand.
False
Operations strategies are implemented in the same way in all types of organizations.
False
PERT, but not CPM, has the ability to consider the precedence relationships in a project.
False
Process maps use distance, but not time, to show the movement of material, product, or people through a process.
False
Production technology has had a major impact on services, but as yet there has been little reduction in service labor requirements
False
Productivity is the total value of all inputs to the transformation process divided by the total value of the outputs produced.
False
Professional services typically require low levels of labor intensity.
False
Quality is mostly the business of the quality control staff, not ordinary employees
False
SWOT analysis identifies those activities that make a difference between having and not having a competitive advantage
False
Shewhart's contributions to operations management came during the Scientific Management Era
False
Shortening the project's duration by deleting unnecessary activities is called "project crashing."
False
Source inspection is inferior to inspection before costly operations
False
Successful process redesign focuses on departmental areas where small, continuous improvements can be made
False
The Japanese use the term "poka-yoke" to refer to continuous improvement.
False
The PERT pessimistic time estimate is an estimate of the minimum time an activity will require
False
The critical path can be determined by use of either the "forward pass" or the "backward pass."
False
The fundamental difference between PERT and CPM is that PERT uses the beta distribution for crashing projects while CPM uses cost estimates.
False
The multidomestic OM strategy maximizes local responsiveness while achieving a significant cost advantage
False
The net present value of $10,000 to be received in exactly three years is considerably greater than $10,000.
False
The production process at Hard Rock Café is limited to meal preparation and serving customers.
False
The quality loss function indicates that costs related to poor quality are low as long as the product is within acceptable specification limits.
False
The shortest of all paths through the network is the critical path.
False
The standard deviation of project duration is the average of the standard deviation of all activities on the critical path.
False
The typical full-service restaurant uses a product-focused process.
False
Utilization is the number of units a facility can hold, receive, store, or produce in a period of time.
False
Work Breakdown Structure is a useful tool in project management because it addresses the timing of individual work elements.
False