Operation Management Chapter 1
Operation Management Chapter 1
Operation Management Chapter 1
Introduction
• Definition
• Operations function and its environments
• Operations objectives
• Operation systems
• The life cycle approach
• Historical development of operations
management
• Productivity and competitiveness
Organization
– Marketing
• Selling, Promoting
• Assessing customer wants and needs
3
Definition
• Operations Management is:
– A management function
– An organization’s core function
– In every organization whether Service or Manufacturing, profit or
Not for profit
An organization is judged by how its operations perform and not what the
organization says it is going to do!
• Operations management is very wide in scope of
responsibilities and will draw upon a range of
functions within the organization, not be limited to
a specific department.
• Operations management is concerned with those
activities that enable an organization to transform
a range of basic inputs (materials, energy,
customers’ requirements, information, skills,
finance, etc.) into outputs for the end customer.
• Operations management is defined as the
design, operation, and improvement of the
systems that create and deliver the firm’s
primary products and services.
• In the words of Mr. E.L. Brech: “Production and Operation
Management is the process of effective planning and regulating the
operations of that section of an enterprise which is responsible for
the actual transformation of materials into finished products”.
• Production and Operation Management deals with decision making
related to production processes, so that the resulting goods and
services are produced in accordance with the quantitative
specifications and demand schedule with minimum
cost.(According to this definition design and control of the
production system are two main functions of production and
operation management.)
• Production and Operation Management is a set of general
principles for production economies, facility design, job design,
schedule design, quality control, inventory control work study and
budgeting control. (This definition explains the main areas of an
enterprise where the principles of production and operation
management can be applied.)
Scope of Operations Management
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
1-12
OPERATION FUNCTION
• OM’s function focuses on adding value through
the transformation process (technical core) of
converting inputs into outputs.
• The operation function of an organization is the
part that produces the organization’s products.
• The product may be physical goods or services.
This function performs several activities to
‘transform’ a set of inputs into a useful output
using a conversion process.
Basic Functions of Operations
Management
• Planning u Controlling
– Capacity, utilization – Inventory
– Quality
– Location
– Costs
– Choosing products or Organization
u
services
– Degree of standardization
– Make or buy
– Subcontracting
– Layout – Process selection
– Projects u Staffing
– Scheduling – Hiring/lay off
– Market share – Use of overtime
– Plan for risk reduction, – Incentive plans
plan B?
– Forecasting
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OM’s Transformation Process/System
© Wiley 2010 16
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 1-18
Food Processor
Inputs become Outputs after some Transformation (Process or Operation)
Food processing example:
1-19
Hospital Process
Table 2
1-20
Today’s OM Environment
• Customers demand better quality, greater speed,
and lower costs
• Companies implementing lean system concepts
– a total systems approach to efficient
operations
• Recognized need to better manage information
using Enterprise Resource Planning and CRM
systems
• Increased cross-functional decision making
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This basic model can be expanded
FEEDBACK
The combination of manufacturing
and service operations for the customer
Objectives of Production and Operation
management
• Producing the right kind of goods and services that satisfy
customers’ needs (effectiveness objective).
• Maximizing output of goods and services with minimum
resource inputs (efficiency objective).
• Ensuring that goods and services produced conform to pre-
set quality specifications (quality objective).
• Minimizing throughput-time- the time that elapses in the
conversion process- by reducing delays, waiting time and
idle time (lead time objective).
• Maximizing utilization of manpower, machines, etc.
(Capacity utilization objective).
• Minimizing cost of producing goods or rendering a service
(Cost objective).
The objectives of production management are “to
produce goods and services of the right
quality, in the right quantities, according to
the time schedule and a minimum cost”.
Historical Evolution of Operations
Management
• Industrial revolution (1770’s)
• Scientific management (1911)
– Mass production
– Interchangeable parts
– Division of labor
• Human relations movement (1920-60)
• Decision models (1915, 1960-70’s)
• Influence of Japanese manufacturers (JIT/TQM)
1-27
• Manufacturing Management:
In 1776 (Adam Smith; Wealth of Nation)- introduced the concept of traditional
manufacturing management. (Division and Reassigning of Work to workers in
order to make them skilled and efficient in their jobs)
In 1900 (F.W. Tailor; Scientific Management Theory)- concept of Scientific
Management System:
• Science, not rule of thumb
•Cooperation, not individualism
•Harmony, not conflict
•Development of Workers
• Production Management: During 1930s to 1950s ( Development
of many techniques for elimination of waste and increasing efficiency in
manufacturing activity/ behavioral, sociological, psychological factors to make
good environment)
• Operation Management:
Since 1970s; Manufacturing and service sectors
Operation management focuses more in service sectors
Historical Development of OM
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Historical Development con’t
• Reengineering 1990-
• Global competition 1980-
• Flexibility 1990-
• Time-Based Competition 1990-
• Supply chain Management 1990-
• Electronic Commerce 2000-
• Outsourcing & flattening of world 2000-
For long-run success, companies must place much importance on their operations
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OM in Practice
• OM has the most diverse organizational function
• Manages the transformation process
• OM has many faces and names such as;
– V. P. operations, Director of supply chains, Manufacturing
manager
– Plant manger, Quality specialists, etc.
• All business functions need information from OM in
order to perform their tasks
© Wiley 2010 31
Business Information Flow
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OM Across the
Organization – con’t
• Marketing is not fully able to meet customer needs if they do
not understand what operations can produce
• Finance cannot judge the need for capital investments if they do
not understand operations concepts and needs
• Information systems enables the information flow throughout
the organization
• Human resources must understand job requirements and worker
skills
• Accounting needs to consider inventory management, capacity
information, and labor standards
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Functions and Responsibilities of
Production & Operation manager
• 1. Planning the geographical location of the factory;
• 2. Purchasing production equipment;
• 3. Layout of equipment's within the factory;
• 4. Product Design;
• 5. Establishing the work standards;
• 6. Capacity Planning;
• 7. Production Planning and scheduling;
• 8. Inventory Management;
• 9. Supply Chain Management;
• 10. Quality Control;
• 11. Industrial Relations;
• 12. Budgeting and capacity planning;
• 13. Monitoring of productivity
Some of the major responsibilities of a
production manager are:
(1) Production planning
(2) Production control
(3) Quality control
(4) Method analysis
(5) Inventory control
(6) Plant layout
(7) Work measurement and
(8) Other functions:
(1) Production planning:
Goods or services
= -----------------------------------------------------
-----Capital, manpower, materials, machines
and land and building
Productivity
Units produced
Productivity =
Input used
1,000
= = 4 units/labor-hour
250
1. PRODUCT.
2. PLANT &EQUIPMENT.
3. TECHNOLOGY.
4. MATERIAL & ENERGY.
5. HUMAN FACTOR.
6. WORK METHOD.
7. MANAGEMENT STYLE.
PRODUCTIVITY IMPROVEMENT TECHNIQUES
1. TECHNOLOGY BASED
2. EMPLOYEE BASED.’
3. MATERIAL BASED.
4. PROCESS BASED.
5. PRODUCT BASED.
6. MANAGEMENT BASED.
Competitive Dimensions
• Cost
• Quality and Reliability
• Delivery
– Flexibility
– Speed
– Reliability
• Coping with Changes in Demand
• New Product Introduction
– Speed
– Flexibility
What is automation
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EXAMPLES OF AUTOMATION
• automatic machine tools to process parts-
CNC m/c
• industrial robots
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Types of automation
• Fixed automation
• Programmable automation
• Flexible automation
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Fixed automation
65
Programmable Automation
A manufacturing system designed with the capability
to change the sequence of operations to
accommodate different product configurations
Typical features:
• High investment in general purpose equipment
• Lower production rates than fixed automation
• Flexibility to deal with variations and changes in
product configuration
• Most suitable for batch production
• Physical setup and part program must be changed
between jobs (batches)
Programmable automation contd.
• In programmable automation,
reconfiguring the system for a new
product is time consuming because it
involves reprogramming and set up for
the machines, and new fixtures and
tools.
• Jacquard loom:
The Jacquard machine is a device
fitted to a power loom that simplifies
the process of manufacturing textiles
with such complex patterns as brocade.
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Flexible automation
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Flexible Automation
An extension of programmable automation in
which the system is capable of changing over from
one job to the next with no lost time between jobs
Typical features:
• High investment for custom-engineered system
• Continuous production of variable mixes of
products
• Medium production rates
• Flexibility to deal with soft product variety
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Source: www.seas.upenn.edu
Reasons for automation
• Shortage of labor
• High cost of labor
• Increased productivity
• Competition
• Safety
• Reducing manufacturing lead time
• Lower costs in the long run
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Automation in Production
Systems
Two categories of automation in the production
system:
1. Automation of manufacturing systems in the
factory
2. Computerization of the manufacturing support
systems
• The two categories overlap because
manufacturing support systems are connected
to the factory manufacturing systems
– Computer-Integrated Manufacturing (CIM)