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2. A Business Process is a network of activities performed by resources that transforms inputs into outputs.Process Flow Management is a set of managerial policies specifying how a process should be operated over time.Design of processesHow and when to operateResources allocatedGoal: Improve pe
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1. 1 Process and Layout Choices References:
Ballou, Business Logistics Management, 5th Ed., Prentice-Hall, 2004.
Anupindi, Chopra, Deshmukh, Van Mieghem, Zemel, Managing Business Process Flows, Prentice-Hall,1999.
2. 2 A Business Process is a network of activities performed by resources that transforms inputs into outputs.
Process Flow Management is a set of managerial policies specifying how a process should be operated over time.
Design of processes
How and when to operate
Resources allocated
Goal: Improve performance
3. 3 Operations as a Transformation Process Process view of Organization
4. 4 Some Generic Business Processes
5. 5 Product Attributes Cost
Total costs (purchase and maintenance) incurred by customer to own and experience the product
Delivery response time
Total time a customer waits before receiving the product
Depends on availability and accessibility
Product variety
Range of choice to meet needs of customer
Quality
What functions and how well product performs
Depends on product design and conformance to standards
6. 6 Product Space A product is a bundle of these four attributes.
A point in the 4-dimensional product space.
Customers make trade-off between different product choices, according to her utility.
Company must select the right combination of attributes for product range to appeal to target market segment.
7. 7 Process Attributes Process Cost
Total costs incurred in producing and delivering outputs
Process Flow Time
Total time needed for transforming one unit of input into output
Process Flexibility
Ability of the process to produce and deliver desired product variety
Process Quality
Includes process accuracy, conformance to design specifications, reliability and maintainability
8. 8 Process Flow Measures Questions:
Average flow rate?
Units processed per unit time?
Average flow time?
Time unit spends within process boundaries
Average Work-in-Process?
Units being process
9. 9 Flow-Time Analysis Flow time is the total amount of time a flow unit spends in a process, and includes:
Theoretical flow time minimal time required for processing if no waiting occurs,
Waiting time time spent waiting to be processed.
Flow-time efficiency = . theoretical flow time .
average total flow time
May vary from unit to unit depending on process choice
10. 10 Flow-time as performance measure Flow time affects response time
Short flow time leads to lower inventory
Littles law
WIP earns no revenue, incurs costs
Short flow time in product design and development => early market introduction => first-mover advantage
Short manufacturing flow time => can delay production until better demand forecast
Short flow time requires better quality control
11. 11 Flow rate, flow time and inventory Flow rate, R = number of units flowing through a specific point in process per unit time
Stable process :
average in flow rate = average out flow rate
(throughput rate)
Flow time, T = processing and waiting time
Inventory accumulation rate =
inflow rate outflow rate
Littles law: Inventory level, I = R x T
Inventory turns (turnover ratio)=
Ratio of throughput to average inventory= R/I = 1/T
12. 12 Process Flow Chart
13. 13 Theoretical Flow Time Activity time is the time required by a typical flow unit to complete the activity once
Repetitions of the activity during processing are called visits
Can be fractional to represented expected proportion that needs rework
Work content is the activity time multiplied by average number of visits.
14. 14 Critical Paths and Critical Activities If unit is processed sequentially (process chart consists of a single path), total theoretical time is sum of work content.
If process consists of parallel and sequential activities, a flow unit can exit only after all the activities along all the paths are complete.
Theoretical flow time is the time to complete the longest path(s) in the process flow chart.
Any such path is a Critical path; activities on path are critical activities
Delay of critical activities delays total flow-time
15. 15 The Critical Path Method CPM (critical path method)
J. E. Kelly of Remington-Rand and M. R. Walker of Du Pont (1957)
Scheduling maintenance shutdowns of chemical processing plants
PERT (program evaluation and review technique)
U.S. Navy Special Projects Office (1958)
Polaris missile project
16. 16 CPM Framework Set of activities with precedence relationships
Develop activity network with precedence relationships and activity times.
Compute the critical path (the longest path through the network).
Use the network to plan, schedule, monitor and control the project.
17. 17 CPM Example
18. 18 Earliest start time (ES) : the earliest time that an activity can begin (without violating precedence relationships)
Earliest finish time (EF): the earliest time an activity can finish
19. 19 Latest finish time (LF) : the latest time that an activity can finish (without delaying the entire project)
Latest start time (LS): the latest time an activity can start (without delaying the entire project)
20. 20 A Critical Path A critical path is a sequence of activities that establishes the earliest completion time.
A delay (or increase in duration) of any activity on the critical path delays the entire project.
Slack = amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the entire project
Slack = LS - ES = LF - EF
21. 21 Managing Theoretical Flow Time Decrease work content of activities on critical path(s)
Principles of Scientific Management Taylor, Gilbreths
Move some work content off the critical path
22. 22 Reducing Work Content Work smarter
Work analysis eliminate unnecessary and non-value added activities
Work faster
Change process and/or environment to reduce fatigue
Offer incentives to boost morale
Acquire faster equipment
Do it right the first time
Improve quality, reduce rework
Statistical process control, Autonomation
Change the product mix
Focus on products in demand and has short processing times
23. 23 Moving Work OFF the Critical Path Move to non-critical path
Concurrent engineering
Parallelize activities
Move work to Outer Loop
Pre-processing
Post-processing
24. 24 Process Choice Process types:
project
job
batch
line
continuous
Best choice depends on volume and degree of customisation of goods and services produced.
25. 25 Project process one-of-a-kind products
complex, large scale and scope
high degree of job customisation
unique process/task sequence
release of substantial resources on completion
e.g. technology/product development, political campaign, construction
Firms competitive focus on capabilities rather than products
26. 26 Job Process high customisation, low volume
each job has different processing sequence
order-bidding, repeat orders infrequent and unpredictable
flexible workforce and equipment
make-to-order
e.g. emergency room care, customised furniture/machine parts manufacture, health farms
Firms resources organised around the process.
27. 27 Batch Process higher volume
narrower range of services and products
assemble-to-order
production in batches, rotating through the product range
jumbled flow patterns, but with some dominant paths
e.g. packaged tours, parts manufacturing for an assembly line, grants/admissions processing
28. 28 Line Process (Mass production) high volume
standardised products or services
materials move linearly from operation to operations in fixed sequence
production orders not linked to customer orders
make-to-stock (finished goods inventory)
e.g. automobile/appliance manufacture, fast-food restaurants
Mass customisation?
29. 29 Continuous Process high volume
rigid line flows
single product
capital intensive
specialised equipment
non-stop production
e.g. petroleum refinery, beer production, electricity generation
30. 30 Process Flow Measures Questions:
Average flow rate?
Units processed per unit time?
Average flow time?
Time unit spends within process boundaries
Average Work-in-Process?
Units being process
31. 31 Layout Planning The physical arrangement of economic activity centres within a facility.
Which centres to consider?
How much space?
Configuration?
Location?
Relative position
Absolute location
32. 32 Production/Service Layout:General PrinciplesProcess Layout vs Product Layout
33. 33 Product layout Equipment placed along the flow-path of a particular product
e.g. assembly lines
Equipment duplicated to avoid backtracking
Dedicated equipment, low flexibility
Low unit processing costs, low WIP inventory
Appropriate for high volume production, low product variety
Key: avoid bottlenecks, balance workload, avoid unnecessary idleness
34. 34 1. Review application for correctness
2. Process and record payment
3. Check for violations and restrictions
4. Conduct eye test
5. Photograph applicant
6. Issue temporary license
35. 35
36. 36 Assembly Lines Product manufactured by visiting a sequence of workstations
PACED - each workpiece spend exactly the same amount of time at each workstation
(Cycle time = C)
Cycle time determined by desired production rate
Assembly line balancing
tasks, precedence relations
determine no. of workstations and task assignments (n)
Efficiency = (Total task time)/[(Cycle time)(#workstations)]
37. 37
38. 38 Assembly line balancing example
39. 39
40. 40
41. 41 Process Layout Similar equipment or functions grouped together
Appropriate for low-volume, high-variety production
Each product visit the functional areas (departments) in a different sequential order
e.g. hospitals, mail-order warehouse, job shops
In service context: allow each customer to define his/her own sequence of service activities (customization)
general purpose equipment, flexible to adapt to new products
loss production due to setups, fluctuating workloads
jumbled work flow, costly material-handling
waiting between activities , higher WIP inventory
Key: job dispatching, minimize material handling costs
42. 42 Ocean World Theme Park Major attractions:
A: killer whale
B: sea lions
C: dolphins
D: water skiiing
E: aquarium
F: water rides
Want to minimize visitorstravel distance between attractions.
(From Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons,Service Management for Competitive Advantage)
43. 43
44. 44 CRAFT (1964)(Computerised Relative Allocation of Facilities Technique) Tries to place departments with large interdepartmental traffic adjacent to each other
Data requirements:
interdepartmental flow
cost per unit distance travelled
SPACECRAFT
multi-storey layout
45. 45 CRAFT Cost of layout = pairwise sum of
(flow)(distance)(cost/unit distance)
Heuristic:
starts with an initial layout
interchange of locations of two departments if cost reduced
stop when no pairwise improvements found
Limitations:
optimality not guaranteed
distance may not be reflect true material handling costs
Assumes every department same-sized and rectangular
46. 46
47. Copyright: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 47 Process Layout: Systematic Layout Planning Numerical flow of items between departments
Can be impractical to obtain
Does not account for the qualitative factors that may be crucial to the placement decision
Systematic Layout Planning
Accounts for the importance of having each department located next to every other department
Is also guided by trial and error
Switching departments then checking the results of the closeness score
48. Copyright: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 48 Systematic Layout Planning--Example: Reasons for Closeness
49. Copyright: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 49 Systematic Layout Planning--ExampleImportance of Closeness
50. Irwin/McGraw-Hill 50 Systematic Layout Planning--ExampleRelating Reasons and Importance
51. Copyright: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 51 Systematic Layout Planning--ExampleInitial Relationship Diagram
52. Copyright: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998 52 Systematic Layout Planning--ExampleInitial and Final Layouts
53. 53 Flow shops Product Layout Uses specialized resources that perform limited tasks but with precision and speed
Limited product variety, large volume
High fixed cost spread over huge volume, leading to low per unit cost
Resources located according to the sequence of activities needed to produce particular product; may duplicate resources
Low unit processing cost, high volume, consistent quality
54. 54 Job Shop Process Layout Uses flexible resources to produce low volumes of customized high-variety products
Uses general purpose equipment
Resources with similar functional capabilities located in close proximity
Many products simultaneously flowing through, each with its own route
Jumbled work flows, large WIP, waiting between activities
Frequent setups, fluctuating workload, long flow times
High process flexibility and product customization
55. 55 Matching Products and Process Hayes and Wheelwright (1979)
56. 56 Process Planning Strategic Positioning and Operational Effectiveness
Strategic Fit
Terry Hills procedure to develop a manufacturing strategy
57. 57 Operations Frontier The smallest curve(surface) that contains all the current industry positions
Firms located on the same ray (from origin) share same competitive priorities
Firms on operations frontier have superior performance (best practices, benchmarks)
Operational effectiveness measured by distance between current position and the operations frontier
Concave frontier => tradeoffs between performance dimensions
Operational frontier shifts outward
58. 58 The Operations Frontier
59. 59 Managing Flow Rate Flow rate depends on:
theoretical capacity
resource unavailability & idleness
Manage supply and demand
have reliable suppliers
better forecasts
Decrease resource idleness
synchronise flows to reduce starvation
set appropriate buffer size to reduce blockage
Increase net availability
improve maintenance
improve worker morale, reduce absenteeism
reduce setup/changeover frequency
Increase theoretical capacity
decrease unit load
increase load batch or resource units
increase scheduled availability
60. 60 Summary Process choice and impact on competitive priorities
Flow Time Analysis
Critical Path Method
Job shop vs. flow shop
Layout Design methods
Flow rate/flow time/WIP measures