MGMT 309 Chapter 20

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What other decisions must be made

level of quality desired, optimal cost of each product or service, exactly how much

Most basic problems of designing operation systems

product-service mix, capacity, facilities

4 basic kinds of inventory

raw materials, work in progress, finished goods, and in transit inventories

Woodward's 3 forms of technology

unit or small batch large batch or mass production continuous process

Flexible manufacturing systems

usually have robotic work units or workstations, assembly lines, and robotic carts or some other form of computer controlled transport system to move material as needed from one part of the system to another

Disadvtgs of computerized systems

-CIM are so expensive they raise break even point -CAD are too complex to be completely reliable -Generate resistence

Six Sigma

-Dvlped by Motorola -Attempts to eliminate mistakes by making corrections until errors disappear

Cellular layout

-New -Physical configuration of facilities used when families of products can follow similar flow paths

Importance of Productivity

-Primary determinant of profitability -Partially determines std of living -US has one of the highest levels of productivity worldwide

Strategic Componenet

-Starting point of TQM -Org culture must change to recognize quality is an objective that be must pursued -Commitment from top mgmt

Total Quality Mgmt (TGM; quality assurance)

-Strategic commitment by top mgmt to change its whole approach to business in order to make quality a guiding factor in everything it does -Most pervasive approach

Partial productivity ratio

-Uses only one category of resource -Not necessary to transform the units of input into some other unit -Provides managers w specific insights into how changing different resource inputs affects productivity

Installing a meaningful quality enhancement program

1. Decreases number of defects 2. Resources dedicated to reworking flamed output will decrease 3. More units produced with fewer resources

8 dimensions of quality

1. Performance: products primary operating characteristic 2. Features: supplements to a products basic functioning characteristics 3. Reliability: probability of not malfunctioning during a specified period 4. Conformance: The degree to which a products design and operating characteristic meet established stds 5. Durability: measure for product life 6. Serviceability: The speed and ease of repair 7. Aesthetics: How a product looks, feels, tastes, and smells 8. Perceived quality: as seen by a customer

Manufacturing

A form of business that combines and transforms resource inputs into tangible outcomes

ISO 9000:2000

A set of quality standards created by the International Organization for Standardization and revised in 2000 -Stds covering product testing, employee training, record keeping, supplier relations and repair policies and procedures

Statistical quality control (SQC)

A set of specific statistical techniques that can be used to monitor quality; included acceptance sampling and in-process sampling

ISO 14000

A set of standards for environmental performance

Computer assisted manufacturing

A technology that relies on computers to design or manufacture products -Especially useful in reorders

Productivity

An economic measure of efficiency that summarizes what is produced relative to resources used to produce it

Just in time (JIT) method

An inventory system that has necessary materials arriving as soon as they are needed so that the production process is not interrupted -First popularized by the Japanese -Reduces org investment in raw materials and storage space

Service organization

An organization that transoms resources into an intangible output and creates time or place utility for customers

Robot

Any artificial device that is able to perform functions ordinarily thought to be appropriate for human beings

Purchasing mgmt (procurement)

Buying materials and resources needed to produce products and services

Computer integrated manufacturing

CAD and CAM are linked together and computer networks automatically adjust machine placements and settings to enhance both the complexity and the flexibility of scheduling

Employee involvement

Critical component in improving quality

Control mechanism

Device that sends instructions to the automatic machine

In transit (pipeline)

Distribute products to customers -Source of control: transportation and distribution control systems

Work in process

Enable overall production to be divided into stages of manageable size -Source of control: shop floor control systems

In process sampling

Evaluates products during production so that needed changes can be made

Product-service mix

How many and what kinds of products or services (or both) to offer

Methods

Improvement of operating systems used by the org during the actual transformation process improves service quality

Materials

Increasing quality requirements they impose on their suppliers as a way of improving the quality of their own products

Technology

Investing in higher grade machines capable of doing jobs more precisely and reliably improves quality

Company productivity

Level of productivity achieved by the an individual company

Inventory control (materials control)

Managing the orgs raw materials, work in process, finished goods and products in transit

Malcolm Baldridge Award

Named after a former secretary of commerce, this prestigious award is given to firms that achieve major quality improvements

What is the core of what orgs do as they add value and create products and services

Operations mgmt

Sensor

Parts of the system that gather info and compare it to preset standards

Fixed-position layout

Physical configuration of facilities arranged around a single work area; used for the manufacture of large and complex products such as airplanes

Process layout

Physical configuration of facilities arranged around the process; used in facilities that create or process a variety of products EX: auto shops, health care clinics -Each conversion task centralized in a single dpmt

Product layout

Physical configuration of facilities arranged around the product; used when large quantities of a single product are needed EX: Dell

Total factor productivity

Productivity = Outputs / Inputs -Overall indicator of how well an organization uses all of its resources -Must be expressed in the same terms ($, units, etc)

Unit and individual productivty

Productivity achieved by a unit or dpmt within an org and the level of productivity attained by a single person

Finished goods

Provide ready supply of products on customer demand and enable long, efficient production runs -Source of control: high level production scheduling systems in conjunction with marketing

Raw materials

Provide the materials needed to make the product -Source of control: purchasing models and systems

Acceptance sampling

Sampling finished foods to ensure that quality stds have been met

Outsourcing

Subcontracting services and operations to other firms that can perform them more cheaply or better

Capacity decision is high risk because of the uncertainty of the future

TRUE

Control systems should focus on elements most crucial to goal attainment

TRUE

Different organizations may have different facilities requirements

TRUE

Improved quality lowers cost

TRUE

In the 1970s, manufacturing majorly declined due to foreign competition

TRUE

Managers in service orgs have come to see than many of the tools, techniques, and methods that are used in a factory as useful to a service firm

TRUE

Quality and productivity are related

TRUE

Quality has become one of the most competitive points in business today

TRUE

Strategy affects operations mgmt, and operations mgmt affects strategy

TRUE

To use operations mgmt as control, coordinate it with other functions

TRUE

Use of robotics has steadily increased since then 1980s

TRUE -Welding first seen and most common -Materials handling is a close second

Catalyst for emergence of quality as a mainstream concern was foreign business

TRUE (mostly the Japanese)

Capacity

The amount of products, services or both that can be produced by an organization

Value-Added Analysis

The comprehensive evaluation of all work activities, materials flows, and paperwork to determine the value that they add for customers

Layout

The physical configuration of facilities, the arrangement of equipment within facilities, or both

Facilities

The physical locations where products or services are created, stored, and distributed -Dpdt on location and layout

Location

The physical positioning or geographic sit of facilities

Automation

The process of designing work so that it can be completely or almost completely performed by machines -Improves products and fosters innovation -Relies on feedback, info, sensors and a control mechanism -Transition began during WWII (programmable) -More jobs created than lost

Benchmarking

The process of learning how other firms do things in an exceptionally high-quality manner

Supply chain mgmt

The process of managing operations control, resource acquisition and inventory so as to improve overall efficiency and effectiveness

Technology

The set of processes and systems used by organizations to convert resources into products or services

Cycle time

The time needed by the org to accomplish activities such as dvlping, making and distributing products or services

Operations mgmt

The total set of managerial activities used by an org to transform resource inputs into products, services or both

Quality

The totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs

Computer aided design

The use of computers to design parts and complete products and to stimulate performance so that prototypes need not be constructed

Aggregate productivity

Total level of productivity achieved by a country

Industry productivity

Total productivity achieved by all the firms in a particular industry

Demand

a major consideration in determining demand

Feedback

flow of info from machine back to sensor


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