1 / 40

Operations Management in Manufacturing and Service

Learn about the elements of an operating system, how manufacturers and service providers use operations management, how to measure productivity, scheduling methods, the role of quality, and the three ways to control operations.

haleyk
Download Presentation

Operations Management in Manufacturing and Service

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER 18 Operations Management

  2. Learning Objectives • List the elements of an operating system • Describe how manufacturers and service providers use operations management • Explain how to measure productivity • Recount the methods of scheduling operations • Discuss the role of quality in operations management • Identify the three ways to control operations

  3. List the elements of an operating system LO - 18.1

  4. Elements of an operating system Inputs(physical and intangible) Transformation(value-adding)processes Outputs(tangible and intangible) Control systems(monitor and correct problems) Feedback(communication tools) Operations Management

  5. Figure 18.1 - Control Systems

  6. Describe how manufacturers and service providers use operations management LO - 18.2

  7. Operations Management • Production • Broadly describes what businesses of all types do in creating goods and services • Productivity: Measure of production • Way to determine the efficiency of a business

  8. Types of manufacturing system Analytic systems Synthetic systems Operations Management Manufacturing system that reduces inputs into component parts to extract products Manufacturing system that combines inputs to create a finished product or change it into a different product

  9. Types of production processes Continuous process Intermittent process Operations Management Operates for long periods of time without interruption Operates in short cycles so that it can change products

  10. Automation

  11. Operations Management for Service Businesses • Operations’ processes differ from one product and service to another, and some overlap • Service businesses are viewed as intermittent-process businesses • Hair salons • Accounting firms • Auto service centers

  12. Operations Management for Service Businesses • Certain service businesses adopt continuous processes to increase productivity • Difference between service and manufacturing operations is the amount of customer contact involved

  13. Table 18.1 - Product and Service Operations Systems

  14. Explain how to measure productivity LO - 18.3

  15. What is Productivity?

  16. Ways to Measure Manufacturing Productivity • Total productivity = Total outputs Total inputs = Outputs Labor + capital + raw materials + all other inputs • Materials productivity = Outputs Materials

  17. Sources of manufacturing productivity improvements Employees accomplishing more Technology that speeds production Changing processes used by the business Productivity

  18. Technological innovation Ways to measure service productivity Ergonomics Management style Service Productivity

  19. Recount the methods of scheduling operations LO - 18.4

  20. Scheduling methods Forward scheduling Backward scheduling Scheduling Operations Materials and resources are allocated for production when a job order comes in Arranging production activities around the due date for the product

  21. Scheduling Routing Sequencing Dispatching Scheduling Operations Information showing the steps required to produce a product Order in which the steps need to occur to produce a product Allocating resources and beginning the steps to produce a product

  22. Figure 18.2 - Gantt Chart

  23. Discuss the role of quality in operations management LO - 18.5

  24. Quality Customer perspective Business perspective Quality-Centered Management How well a good or service satisfies their needs Degree to which a product conforms to established tolerance standards

  25. Quality-Centered Management • Six sigma: Tolerance range in which only 3.4 defects per million are allowed • Signifies the quality movement in manufacturing and entire organizations • Defect rate: Number of goods produced that are outside the company’s boundaries of acceptable quality • Used to measure the quality of a product • Tolerance range: Boundaries that managers set in determining acceptable product quality

  26. Table 18.2 - Sigma Levels and Defect Rates

  27. Basic Components of a Six-Sigma Program • Define products and services by describing the actual products or services that are provided to customers • Identify customer requirements for products or services by stating them in measurable terms • Compare products with requirements by identifying gaps between what the customer expects and what the customer is actually receiving

  28. Basic Components of a Six-Sigma Program • Describe the process by providing explicit details • Improve by simplification and mistake-proofing • Measure quality and productivity by establishing baseline values and then tracking improvement

  29. Six-Sigma Program Measurements • Statistical analysis • Descriptive statistics • Inferential statistics • Statistical tools • Analysis of variance (ANOVA) • Regression analysis

  30. Six-Sigma Quality Activities and Tools

  31. Six-Sigma Quality Activities and Tools

  32. Six sigma goals Improved manufacturing Increased customer satisfaction Ultimate Goals of Six-Sigma

  33. Quality-Centered Management

  34. Identify the three ways to control operations LO - 18.6

  35. Types of controls Feedforward quality control(inputs) Concurrent quality control(process) Feedback quality control(output) Control Operations

  36. Concurrent Quality Control

  37. Negotiate consultant prices Request customer subsidies Handling ISO certification costs Look for consultant alternatives Consider the need for full certification Concurrent Quality Control

  38. Concurrent Quality Control

  39. Figure 18.3 - Control Charts

  40. Benchmarking Opportunities

More Related