Production and Operations Management
Autumn Semester 2017, Production and Operations Management @D-MTEC, ETH Zurich, Prof. Dr. T. Netland
Autumn Semester 2017, Production and Operations Management @D-MTEC, ETH Zurich, Prof. Dr. T. Netland
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 73 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Category | Micro-Economics |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 04.01.2018 / 23.01.2020 |
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Operations management is...
... the activity of managing the resources of the organization that deliver goods and services
SIPOC?
Supplier => Input => Process => Output => Customer
4M (and extensions)?
Man, Machine, Material, Method
(Money, Measurement, Milleau)
Market based view?
What does the customer want?
Resource based view?
What can we offer to the customer?
SWOT
SWOT: SW => internal, OT => external, environment
Strength, Weaknesses
Opportunities, Threats
PESTEL
Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, Legal
=> To study environment
Porter's 5 forces?
- Threat of new entrants
- Threat of substitute
- Bargaining power of customers
- Bargaining power of suppliers
- Rivalery
Competitive priorities?
Cost
Quality
Delivery
Flexibility
Dependability
Speed
Service
Innovation
Personalization
Safety
Environment
Responsibility
Competitive priorities ⇔ competitive capabilities?
Competitive priorities: strategic preferences or the ways in which an organization chooses to compete in the marketplace ⇒ what we want to do
Competitive capabilities: provide the business with the ability to do something that provides competitive advantage ⇒ what we can do
Order qualifiers ⇔ order winners
- Order qualifier: a required capability (or product/ service characteristics) for selling, but will not win orders
- Safety
- Cost
- Quality
- Dependability
- Order winner: is a capability (or product/ service characteristics) that can win you orders
- Service
- Environment
- Price
- Quality
For a resource to have the potential to result in some sort of competitive advantage it needs to have four attributes
(VRIN):
Valuable
Rare
Imperfectly imitable
Non-substitutable
How to link strategy to operations
1. Understand what your business is – business definition model
2. From the MBV (market based view):
Investigate your overall market environment (for ex. PESTEL)
Define your immediate competitive position (for ex. Porter’s Five Forces)
Understand what your customer wants → order qualifiers vs order winners, Define competitive priorities
3. From the RBV (resource based view):
Leverage your competencies to create a competitive advantage → competitive capabilities
4. Analyze the nature of your competitive advantage to understand how
sustainable it is (for ex. SWOT)
Match competitive capabilities with competitive priorities
Analyze how your competence must change to maintain advantage → dynamic capabilities (ability to upgrade and reconstruct its capabilities in response to the changing environment, therefore attaining and sustaining its competitive advantage)
10 decision areas in operations management
Structural Decision Areas
1. Facilities: location, size, focus, layout..
2. Capacity: ability to meet demand
3. Process technology
4. Supply network: make-or-buy, network config…
Infrastructural Decision Areas
1. Planning and control
2. Quality
3. Work organization
4. Human resources
5. New product development
6. Performance measurement
Stages in increasing operational capability?
Stage 1: correct the worst problems
Stage 2: Adopt best practice
Stage 3: Link strategy with operations
Stage 4: Provide a competitive advantage
Development of operations strategy?
Competitive priorities
=> Decision areas
=> Develop competitive capabilities
Types of processes?
- Continuous
- Assembly lines
- Batch
- Jop Shop
- Project
ETO
Engineer-to-Order (ETO) [specialised machines, projects]
Products and services are created from the drawing board meeting customer requirements
MTO
Make-to-Order (MTO) [aircrafts]
Individual customers are identified during production, each order is made to a particular customer specification
ATO
Assemble-to-order (ATO) [subway]
Builds sub-assemblies in advance of demand, and then puts them together to make the final product when a specific customer order is received
MTS
Make-to-Stock (MTS) [Coca-Cola]
Making standard items that are put into inventory, which can then be used immediately to fulfil customer demand
Customer Order Decoupling Point (CODP)
CODP separates order-driven activities from forecast-driven activities
Process mapping techniques
- Flow diagram
- Swim Lane Diagram
- Process Chart
- Service Blueprint
- Value Stream Map
=> The key point about process mapping is that, whatever technique is used, it must be a team exercise involving all the important stakeholders; process mapping is a tool to develop a
collective vision for change, and needs to take a holistic, systems thinking approach!
3 different capacities?
Capacity=total time available/time needed for task (cycle time)
Design Capacity: is the expected output of an operation when there are no stoppages
Effective Capacity: is the expected output of an operation considering planned stoppages for maintenance, shift change over etc.
Actual Capacity: is the expected output of an operation considering both planned stoppages and unplanned stoppages
Efficiency, formula?
Eff. = actual output / eff. capacity
Utilizitation formula?
Util. = actual output / design capacity
How to add capacity?
Increase design capacity, eg. more labour, reduce cycle time, new machines, new lines
Use overtime, working hours
Improve production process, increase throughput
⇒ altering capacity can be difficult, time-consuming and costly and it has no effect, if it does not address the capacity constraint!
Forecasting
Forecasting is the prediction of future demand, based upon qualitative and quantitative measures
=> demand forecasting
=> capacity forecasting
Quantitative forecasting, components?
Seasonal, random and cyclic variation, trend
Qualitative forecasting methods?
Market surveys
Asking people their opinions about product services or buying intentions
Scenario Planning
Considers the potential scenarios that an organization might face, and then analyses the demand pattern that might result from each scenario.
Delphi Methods
detailed interviews and studies of the opinions of a panel of experts in a particular area
Three general planning strategies ?
Level production:
Use inventory to smooth demand.
The product must be suitable for storage,i.e. not highly customized, and nonperishable, or with a reasonable shelf life
Demand must be relatively reliable, to avoid the risk of large stock-outs or excessive stock levels
Chase demand:
Dynamic capacity. Heavy use of forecasting.
There will always be an element of fixed capacity that can be adjusted only over the long term, such as a building or facilities, but other elements are flexible
3. Demand management:
Manipulate demand.
Involve the marketing department
Varying the price.
Advertisement
Providing an incentive for off-peak services or products.
Additional marketing can create awareness of a product that wasn’t there before
Providing alternative products or services
Inventory types?
Raw materials – purchased but not used
Semi-finished goods
Work-in-process inventory – being worked on
Maintenance/repair/operating supplies (MRO) – for the plant
Finished goods inventory – completed and waiting shipment
Goods in transit – to warehouses and customers
Functions and advantages of inventory
Meeting demand (anticipation)
Protection against stock-out (buffer / “safety stock”)
Cutting costs by ordering in bulk
Flexibility (buffer)
Covering delays (decoupling)
Taking advantage of price changes
Transit or pipeline, and cycle inventories
Problems and disadvantages of inventory
Inventory ties up working capital
Inventory takes up (expensive) space
Inventory is prone to:
Damage
Pilferage (=> Raub, Plünderung)
Obsolescence
Inventory causes manufacturing errors to go undetected
Reducing inventory can make it easier to see problems and delays
Inventory management strategies?
ordering at fixed points in time
P-system (p for periodic): the cyclical review (CR): reorder cycle system
Different amount ordered each time
advantage of CR over ROL: noneed to track how many parts are in stock on a daily basis, But must count or “read” the stock level before each order. See “Stock-Time-Chart”
ordering fixed quantities
Q: the reorder level (ROL) system: sometimes called the reorder point (ROP)
Order a fixed amount (normally the EOQ)
Simplest system: Two-bin system (disadvantage: on average higher inventory level, suitable for high volume, low value parts)
Which inventory system to choose?
depends on several things:
Accuracy:
ROL systems can be more accurate as they always monitor stock levels
Consolidating orders:
CR groups orders from different product groups
Safety stocks:
ROL is short and fixed: Delivery time
CR must also include the time to next review
Implementation costs:
CR’s counting every review period is costly
ERP Evolution
- BOM: Bill of materials
- MRP: Material Requirements Planning
- closed loop MRP
- MRPII: Manufacturing Resource Planning (MRP + money, people, engineering)
- ERP SAAS
Independent vs. dependent demand?
Independent: traktor
Dependent: tyers of the traktor