1. Introduction
1. Introduction
MANAGEMENT
Operations
The part of a business organization that is responsible for producing
goods or services
The collective success or failure of operations functions ----nations’
economy and its ability to compete with its competitors
DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
Technology
adoption
Process
Enhanced
optimization :
customer
smarter
interactions
decisions
Mindset of
innovation
NEED OF OPERATIONS IN DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION
• Areas for • Aligning technology
improving and with operational
innovating in goals
DT, Design for • Right tech for
flexibility customer service
Understanding
Right
process
application
optimization
Bringing
Managing
scalability and
Transition
efficiency
Output
Input (raw
Process (goods and
materials)
services)
“If you drop it on your foot, it won’t hurt you.” (Good or service?)
Steel production
Automobile fabrication
House building
Low service content Road construction
High goods content
Dressmaking
Farming
Computer Repair
Restaurant meal
Songwriting , software
Increasing development
goods content
Increasing Teaching,
service content Surgery
High service content
Low goods content
Manufacturing Service
Degree of customer contact Low High
Effects:
Additional costs , delays, shortages , poor quality, customer
dissatisfaction, organization’s reputation
Organizing:
centralization ,
Controlling subcontracting
inventory,
Planning quality
capacity,
Location,
projects
ROLE OF THE OPERATIONS MANAGER
The Operations Function consists of all activities directly related to
producing goods or providing services.
A primary function of the operations manager is to guide the system by
decision making.
System Design Decisions (affects design)---strategic decision
System capacity
Geographic location of facilities
Arrangement of departments
Acquisition and placement of equipment
Product and service planning
System Operation Decisions (affects operations)---operational decisions
Management of personnel
Inventory planning and control
SCOPE OF OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
The scope of operations management ranges across the organization.
Results:
4 services jobs lost for each manufacturing job
Transfer of work, intellectual knowledge
Erosion of federal, state and local taxes- lower tax revenues
Operations manager
Supply chain manager
Production analyst
Schedule coordinator
Production manager
Industrial engineer
Purchasing manager
Inventory manager
Quality manager
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ASSOCIATIONS
APICS, the Association for Operations Management, 8430 West Bryn Mawr Avenue, Suite
1000, Chicago, Illinois 60631 www.apics.org
American Society for Quality (ASQ) 230 West Wells Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203
www.asq.org
Institute for Supply Management (ISM) 2055 East Centennial Circle, Tempe, Arizona 85284
www.ism.ws
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) 901 Elkridge
Landing Road, Linthicum, Maryland 21090-2909 www.informs.org
The Production and Operations Management Society (POMS) College of Engineering,
Florida International University, EAS 2460,10555 West Flagler Street, Miami, Florida
33174 www.poms.org
The Project Management Institute (PMI)4 Campus Boulevard, Newtown Square,
Pennsylvania 19073-3299 www.pmi.org
Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) 333 East Butterfield Road,
Suite 140, Lombard, Illinois 60148 http//cscmp.org
Finance & Operations
Budgeting
Economic analysis of investment
proposals
Provision of funds
Material
Methods
Equipment
Product and service technology- researchers using scientific approach
information
Resource constraints: trade –off decisions and emphasis on cost control and
productivity improvement
Process analysis and improvement: cost and time reduction, productivity improvement,
process yield improvement, quality improvement, customer satisfaction ---six sigma
process (Price and Quality—Time)
Lean production: quality, flexibility, time reduction and team work; fewer levels of
management (emerged in 1990s)- involves skilled labours
Economic conditions
Innovativeness: in processes and products and services
Quality problems: product design and testing, risk assessment
Risk management: identify, assess, execute to reduce or share risk
Competing in a global economy
Environmental concerns
Ethical conduct
Managing the supply chain
Reduce carbon footprint
Operate sustainable processes
Sustainability
Using resources in ways that do not harm ecological systems that support
human existence
Sustainability measures often go beyond traditional environmental and
economic measures to include measures that incorporate social criteria
in decision making
All areas of business will be affected
Product and service design
Consumer education programs
Disaster preparation and response
Supply chain waste management
Outsourcing decisions
Vegetarian Vs. Non-Vegetarian
Ethics : Standard of behaviour guiding the way one should act in different
situations
Financial statements
Worker safety
Product safety
Quality: warranties
The environment
The community
Hiring and firing workers
Workers rights
In the past, organizations did little to manage the supply chain beyond their
own operations and immediate suppliers which led to numerous problems:
Oscillating inventory levels
Inventory stockouts
Late deliveries
Quality problems
1. The need to improve operations: procurement, distribution and logistics
2. Increasing levels of outsourcing : cost –packaging, moving, sorting etc..
3. Increasing transportation costs
4. Competitive pressures: customized products, shorter production cycles
5. Increasing globalization: increasing SC length
6. Increasing importance of e-business
7. The complexity of supply chains: complex and dynamic; forecast errors ,
changed orders
8. The need to manage inventories
Elements Issues
1. Customers 1. Wants
2. Forecasting 2. Quantity and demand
3. Design 3. Incorporating 1 and 2
4. Capacity planning 4. Matching Supply and demand
5. Processing 5. Controlling quality
6. Inventory 6. Optimised inventory
7. Purchasing 7. Evaluating potential suppliers
8. Suppliers 8. Monitoring supplier quality
9. Location 9. Determining the location of facilities
10. Logistics 10. Best way of moving material and
information
Premier grocery chains in USA
Headquarter is in Rochester NY
It has over 70 stores, 37000 employees, annual sales -$3 billion
High product quality and excellent service
Customer feedback
All of the superstores are giants in size
Full service Deli-large displays
Food and non food items
Unique departments with customised food varieties
Each store is different from other & have separate ordering system
Produce department Meat department
What could be the possible environmental concerns that the case should
consider while setting up similar stores in India?
Product and service design
Consumer education programs
Supply chain resilience
Supply chain waste management
Outsourcing decisions
Operations Interfaces
Maintenance
Personnel MIS
Purchasing Industrial
Procuring materials Engineering: scheduling,
Timing and quantity of
Accounting performance standards, QC,
purchase
Vendor evaluation material handling
When: When will each resource be needed? When should the work
be scheduled? When should materials and other supplies be ordered?
Where: Where will the work be done?
How: How will the product or service be designed? How will the
work be done? How will resources be allocated?
Who: Who will do the work?
Models: Physical, Schematic, Mathematical
Quantitative Approaches : LP, Queuing techniques,
Performance metrics
Analysis of trade –off
Degree of customization
A systems approach
Establishing priorities
Modeling is a key tool used by all decision makers
Model - an abstraction of reality; a simplification of
something.
Physical, Schematic, Mathematical