Chapter 1 Introduction To Operations Management
Chapter 1 Introduction To Operations Management
Chapter 1
Introduction to
Operations Management
1-2
Learning Objectives
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
Key Differences
1. Customer contact
2. Uniformity of input
3. Labor content of jobs
4. Uniformity of output
5. Measurement of productivity
Key Differences
6. Production and delivery
7. Quality assurance
8. Amount of inventory
9. Evaluation of work
10. Ability to patent design
Goods vs Service
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
Decline in Manufacturing Jobs
Productivity
Increasing productivity allows companies to maintain or
increase their output using fewer workers
Outsourcing
Some manufacturing work has been outsourced to more
productive companies
Why Manufacturing Matters
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
Decision Making
Models
Quantitative approaches
Analysis of trade-offs
Systems approach
Models
– Physical
– Schematic
– Mathematical Tradeoffs
• Linear programming
• Queuing Techniques
• Inventory models
• Project models
• Statistical models
1-32
Analysis of Trade-Offs
Suboptimization
Pareto Phenomenon
Financial statements
Worker safety
Product safety
Quality
Environment
Community
Hiring/firing workers
Closing facilities
Worker’s rights
Business Operations Overlap
Operations
Marketing Finance
Operations Interfaces
Industrial
Engineering
Maintenance
Distribution
Purchasing Public
Operations Relations
Legal
Personnel
Accounting MIS
Historical Evolution of Operations
Management
Major trends
The Internet, e-commerce, e-business
Management technology
Globalization
Management of supply chains
Outsourcing
Agility
Ethical behavior
Management Technology
Ethical behavior
Operations strategy
Working with fewer resources
Revenue management
Process analysis and improvement
Increased regulation and product liability
Lean production