Introduction To Operations Management
Introduction To Operations Management
Introduction/Nature of
Operations Management
1-1
Operations Management
• Operations Management is:
The management of systems or processes
that create goods and/or provide services
Organization
Control
Feedback Feedback
Value-Added & Product Packages
Goods Service
Surgery, teaching
Tangible Act
Production of Goods vs. Delivery of
Services
• Production of goods – tangible output
• Delivery of services – an act
• Service job categories
– Government
– Wholesale/retail
– Financial services
– Healthcare
– Personal services
– Business services
– Education
Goods vs Service: High or Low
Characteristic Goods Service
Customer contact
Uniformity of input
Labor content
Uniformity of output
Output
Measurement of productivity
Opportunity to correct problems
Inventory
Evaluation
Patentable
Goods vs Service
Characteristic Goods Service
Customer contact Low High
Uniformity of input High Low
Labor content Low High
Uniformity of output High Low
Output Tangible Intangible
Measurement of productivity Easy Difficult
Opportunity to correct problems High Low
Inventory Much Little
Evaluation Easier Difficult
Patentable Usually Not usual
Scope of Operations Management
Operations Management includes:
– Forecasting
– Capacity planning
– Scheduling
– Managing inventories
– Assuring quality
– Motivating employees
– Deciding where to locate facilities
– Supply chain management
– And more . . .
Types of Operations
Operations Examples
Goods Producing Farming, mining, construction,
manufacturing, power generation
Storage/Transportation Warehousing, trucking, mail
service, moving, taxis, buses,
hotels, airlines
Exchange Retailing, wholesaling, banking,
renting, leasing, library, loans
Entertainment Films, radio and television,
concerts, recording
Communication Newspapers, radio and television
newscasts, telephone, satellites
U.S. Manufacturing vs. Service Employment
Year Mfg. Service
45
90 79 21
50 72 28 Mfg.
80
55 72 28 Service
70
60
60 68 32
65 64 36
Percent
50
70
40 64 36
75
30 58 42
80 44 46
20
85 43 57
10
90 35 65
0
95 25 75
45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 00 02 05
00 30 70
02 25 75 Year
Challenges of Managing Services
• Service jobs are often less structured than
manufacturing jobs
• Customer contact is higher
• Worker skill levels are lower
• Employee turnover is higher
• Input variability is higher
• Service performance can be affected by worker’s
personal factors
Operations function and its
environment
The Environment of Operations
• EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
– Economic environment: Interest rate, tax regulation, inflation, etc…
– Political environment: Gov’t regulations, pollution,
– Competition
– Technology
• INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
– Finance: sources of finance, investment proposals, allocation of funds,
etc..
– Accounting: cost, financial statements
– Marketing: sales forecast, sales order, customer needs, feedback, etc..
– Engineering: method analysis, layout, maintenance, etc…
– HR
– R&D, etc
Operations Management Decision Making
tools
• Models
• Quantitative approaches
• Analysis of trade-offs
• Systems approach
• Establishing priorities
• Ethics
Key Decisions of Operations
Managers
• What
What resources/what amounts
• When
Needed/scheduled/ordered
• Where
Work to be done
• How
Designed
• Who
To do the work
Decision Making
System Design
– capacity
– location
– arrangement of departments
– product and service planning
– acquisition and placement of
equipment
Decision Making
System operation
– personnel
– inventory
– scheduling
– project
management
– quality assurance
Models
– Physical
– Schematic
– Mathematical Tradeoffs
• Linear programming
• Queuing Techniques
• Inventory models
• Project models
• Statistical models
Analysis of Trade-Offs
• Decision on the amount of inventory to stock
– Increased cost of holding inventory
Vs.
– Level of customer service
Systems Approach
Suboptimization
Establishing priorities (Pareto Rule)
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Competitiveness:
• Strategies
– Plans for achieving organizational goals and objectives
• Tactics
– The methods and actions taken to accomplish strategies
Planning and Decision Making
Mission
Goals
Organizational Strategies
Functional Goals
• Order qualifiers
– Characteristics that customers perceive as
minimum standards of acceptability to be
considered as a potential purchase
• Order winners
– Characteristics of an organization’s goods or
services that cause it to be perceived as better
than the competition
Key External Factors
• Economic conditions
• Political conditions
• Legal environment
• Technology
• Competition
• Markets
Key Internal Factors
• Human Resources
• Facilities and equipment
• Financial resources
• Customers
• Products and services
• Technology
• Suppliers
Operations Strategy
• Operations strategy – The approach,
consistent with organization strategy, that
is used to guide the operations function.
Strategic OM Decisions
Decision Area Affects
Product and service design Costs, quality liability and environmental
Capacity Cost structure, flexibility
Process selection and layout Costs, flexibility, skill level, capacity
• Partial measures
– output/(single input)
• Multi-factor measures
– output/(multiple inputs)
• Total measure
– output/(total inputs)
Outputs
Productivity =
Inputs
Measures of Productivity
Productivity
Capital Units of output per dollar input
Dollar value of output per dollar input
Productivity
Energy Units of output per kilowatt-hour
Dollar value of output per kilowatt-hour
Productivity
Example
MFP = Output
Labor + Materials + Overhead
1 30,000 6 450
2 33,600 7 470
3 32,200 7 460
4 35,400 8 480
Solution
Week Output Labor cost Overhead Cost Material Cost
(units)
Multifactor Productivity
•Week 1: 30,000/(2,880+4,320+2,700) = 3.03 units/dollar
•Week 2: 33,600/(3360+5,040+2,820) = 2.99 units/dollar
•Week 1: 32,200/(3,360+5,040+2,760) = 2.89 units/dollar
•Week 1: 35,400/(3,840+5,760+2,880) = 2.84 units/dollar
Factors Affecting Productivity
Capital Quality
Technology Management
Other Factors Affecting Productivity
• Standardization
• Quality
• Use of Internet
• Computer viruses
• Searching for lost or misplaced items
• Scrap rates
• New workers
Other Factors Affecting Productivity
• Safety
• Shortage of IT workers
• Layoffs
• Labor turnover
• Design of the workspace
• Incentive plans that reward productivity
Outsourcing
• Higher productivity in another company is a
key reason organizations outsource work
• Improving productivity may reduce the need
for outsourcing
Improving Productivity