Operations Management I: 3º Gadi-5º Dg-Adi-Der
Operations Management I: 3º Gadi-5º Dg-Adi-Der
Operations Management I: 3º Gadi-5º Dg-Adi-Der
Departamento de Organización de
Empresas y Marketing Dirección de Operaciones I- English teaching
Área de Organización de Empresas
SECTION 1
INTRODUCTION TO OPERATIONS STRATEGY
3º GADI- 5º DG-ADI-DER
2013-2014
Slide presentation Chapter 1
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION TO OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
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1.1 What is OM?
Production: creation of goods and services.
Essential functions:
Marketing: generates demand
Production/operations: creates the product
Finance/accounting: tracks how well the organization is doing, pays
bills, collects the money
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Organizational Charts
Commercial Bank
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1.2. Why study OM?
It is one of the three major functions of any
organization, and it is integrally related to all the
other business functions
We want (and need) to know how goods and
services are produced
We want to understand what operations
managers do
It is such a costly part of an organization
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Options for Increasing
Contribution
Finance/
Marketing Accounting OM
Option Option Option
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Ten Critical Decisions
Ten Decision Areas Chapter(s)
Service and product design 3
Quality management Not covered
Process and capacity 4,6
Location 7
Layout design 8
Human resources, 5
job design
Supply-chain Not covered
management
Inventory management Not covered
Scheduling Not covered
Maintenance Not covered
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The Critical Decisions
Service and product design
What good or service should we offer?
How should we design these products and services?
Quality management
How do we define quality?
Who is responsible for quality?
Process and capacity design
What process and what capacity will these products
require?
What equipment and technology is necessary for these
processes?
Location
Where should we put the facility?
On what criteria should we base the location decision?
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The Critical Decisions
Layout design
How should we arrange the facility and material flow?
How large must the facility be to meet our plan?
Human resources and job design
How do we provide a reasonable work environment?
How much can we expect our employees to produce?
Supply-chain management
Should we make or buy this component?
Who are our suppliers and who can integrate into our e-
commerce program?
Inventory, material requirements planning, and JIT
How much inventory of each item should we have?
When do we re-order?
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The Critical Decisions
Intermediate and short–term scheduling
Are we better off keeping people on the payroll during
slowdowns?
Which jobs do we perform next?
Maintenance
Who is responsible for maintenance?
When do we do maintenance?
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1.3. What Operations Managers Do
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1.5. Operations in the Service
Sector
Characteristics of Goods
Tangible product
Consistent product
definition
Production usually
separate from
consumption
Can be inventoried
Low customer
interaction 14
1.5. Operations in the Service
Sector
Characteristics of Service
Intangible product
Produced and consumed
at same time
Often unique
High customer interaction
Inconsistent product
definition
Often knowledge-based
Frequently dispersed 15
Goods Versus Services
Attributes of Goods Attributes of Services
(Tangible Product) (Intangible Product)
Can be resold Reselling unusual
Can be inventoried Difficult to inventory
Some aspects of quality Quality difficult to measure
measurable
Selling is distinct from Selling is part of service
production
Product is transportable Provider, not product, is
often transportable
Site of facility important for cost Site of facility important for
customer contact
Often easy to automate Often difficult to automate
Revenue generated primarily Revenue generated primarily
from tangible product from the intangible service
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Goods and Services
Automobile
Computer
Installed carpeting
Fast-food meal
Restaurant meal/auto repair
Hospital care
Advertising agency/
investment management
Consulting service/
teaching
Counseling
100% 75 50 25 0 25 50 75 100%
| | | | | | | | |
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1.6.The Productivity Challenge
Productivity is the ratio of outputs (goods
and services) divided by the inputs
(resources such as labor and capital)
Important Note!
Production is a measure of output
only and not a measure of efficiency
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Productivity
Units produced
Productivity =
Input used
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Productivity Calculations
Labor Productivity Units produced
Productivity =
Labor-hours used
1,000
= = 4 units/labor-hour
250
Multi-Factor Productivity
Output
Productivity =
Labor + Material + Energy + Capital
+ Miscellaneous
Also known as total factor productivity
Output and inputs are often expressed in
dollars
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Collins Title Productivity
Old System:
Staff of 4 works 8 hrs/day 8 titles/day
Payroll cost = $640/day Overhead = $400/day
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Collins Title Productivity
Old System:
Staff of 4 works 8 hrs/day 8 titles/day
Payroll cost = $640/day Overhead = $400/day
New System:
14 titles/day Overhead = $800/day
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Collins Title Productivity
Old System:
Staff of 4 works 8 hrs/day 8 titles/day
Payroll cost = $640/day Overhead = $400/day
New System:
14 titles/day Overhead = $800/day
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Productivity Variables
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Service Productivity
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