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
Kartei Details
Karten | 73 |
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Sprache | English |
Kategorie | BWL |
Stufe | Universität |
Erstellt / Aktualisiert | 04.01.2018 / 23.01.2020 |
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Characteristics of pharmaceutical products
Complex and complex to produce
Expensive
Difficult distribution (cooling, security, ..)
Regulated
Partially fragile
High volume
Perishable
Pharma activities are...
Pharma activities are
Global (regulations, cost optimization, utilization rates, cost of production sites, expertise of staff, historical reasons)
capital intensive
highly regulated
Make to stock operations
Long Lead Times (up to 18 months) makes Planning of Pharmaceutical Supply Chains a very difficult Activity
T-Point: Packaging (different languages, regulations, etc.)
Danger of bullwhip effects
=> counter measures
Reduce lead times
Lean production; 1. Overproduction 2. Waiting Time 3. Transport 4. Access Inventory 5. Inefficient Movements 6. Insufficient Quality 7. Inappropriate Processes
Superior demand planning
what, how much, when
Superior supply planning
Replenishment (Nachschub)
Master scheduling
Alignment of supply & demand (via sales and operations planning)
Invest in building trust with supply chain partners
The 5 lean principles
Specify value from the standpoint of the end customer.
Identify all the steps in the value stream for each product family, eliminating whenever possible those steps that do not create value (that is waste).
Make the value-creating steps occur in tight sequence so the product will flow smoothly toward the customer.
As flow is introduced, let customers pull value from the next upstream activity.
Continuously improve the processes.
TPS Toyota production system components?
Just-in-time: the right part at the right time in the right amount
Line-balancing (Heijunka): make cycle times and demand even, Well-trained people and well-maintained equipment work reliably to achieve leveled production based on takt
Muri-Mura-Muda
Muri: overburden
Mura: unevenness
Muda: waste
Kanban: Pull-System => no/very low in process inventory ⇒ under the constraint of FIFO the throughput time gets massively reduced!
Built-in-quality and automation with human touch (Jidoka) => stop and fix problems
Andon: Never pass on bad quality, Stop-the-line
5S
Sort
Set in OrderShine
Standardize
Sustain
Cycle time
[time per unit]
Cycle Time is the length of time, on average, that it takes to complete a step or set of steps within an operation
Generally, the step with the longest cycle time will be the bottleneck
Lead time
[minutes, hours, etc.]
the average length of time it will take a new set of inputs to move all the way through the operation, assuming no unusual measures are taken.
Work in Progress / Throughput
5S?
5S
Sort: eliminate unnecessary item from the workspace
Set in Order: arrange items so that they are easy to use, find and put away
Shine: keep the items and work area neat and clean
Standardize: create a consistent approach to tasks and procedures
Sustain: make a habit of maintaining the correct procedures
Muri-Mura-Muda
Muri-Mura-Muda
Muri: overburden
Mura: unevenness
Muda: Where to reduce waste? TIM WOODS
Transport, Inventory, Motion
Waiting, overproduction, over-processing, defects, skills (not-use of brainpower)
7 Quality control tools
- Process flow diagram
- Check sheet
- Histogram
- Pareto diagram
- Cause and effect diagram (fishbone / Ishikawa diagram)
- Scatter diagram
- Control charts
PDCA/PDSA?
Problem solving method:
Plan-Do-Check-Act
Plan-Do-Study-Act
DMAIC?
Problem solving method from six sigma?
Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control
8d?
Problem solving method
1. Build a team.
2. Define the problem.
3. Containment action.
4. Determine the root cause.
5. Verify the root cause.
6. Corrective action.
7. Prevention.
8. Congratulate the team
Characteristics of a service
Intangibility
You cannot hold or touch a service
Experiences are not physical products ⇒ less traded
Inseparability
Simultaneity of production and consumption
Services cannot be separated from service providers
Presence of the customer in the conversion process
Heterogeneity
Very difficult to make each service experience identical ⇒ consumer involvement!
Perishability
Services last a specific time
Cannot be stored for later use
Types of services
Business-to-business B2B [Consulting, Banking]
Business-to-consumer B2C [Restaurants, Hairdresse]
Internal services (in organizations, eg. HR, R&D, IT)
Public services (G2C) [Military]
Not-for-profit services [Red Cross]
(Consumer-to-consumer services) [Ratings on tripadvisor, wiki]
Variation and its effects
⇒ chaos curve: Variation affects performance exponentially, not linearly! Overburden (muri) starts before maximal capacity usage
⇒ Increasing variability always degrades the performance of a system
⇒ overburden (muri) starts before max- capacity usage
⇒ Overall equipment effectiveness: good value is around 80%!
The balanced scorecard, components?
- Financial perspective
- Internal business perspective
- Innovation & Learning perspective
- Customer perspective
Why performance measurement?
Measurement provides status ⇒ “You cannot manage what you cannot measure”
Measurement encourage certain behaviors ⇒ “You get what you measure”
Measurement is needed for improvement ⇒ “If you cannot measure it, you cannot tell if you have improved
Why Industry 4.0 might be a revolution?
Velocity
Exponential (not linear) development (eg. costs)
Breadth and depth
Multiple technologies
Effect on economy, business, society, individuals
System impact
Interdependent system change
Connectivity and speed (e.g. social media)
→ The ‘combinatorial’ effects of technologies, such as mobile, cloud, sensors, analytics and the Internet of Things, are accelerating progress exponentially.
How will operations change? (Speculation) => Industry 4.0
SMARTER, LEANER, FASTER
Data driven real-time response
On-demand production
Inventory reduction
Waste reduction
More customization
More mass customization
More MTO, less MTS
More effective use of
underutilized assets
Incl. sharing economy
More servitization
“As a service“ subscription models
More connectivity
More transparency
Consumer power, customer orientation, democratization
A shift towards more knowledge
intensive white collar work
Need new training
Emergence of “nanofactories”
3D printing
Sustainable local production
Triple bottom line
People
Planet
Profit
CSR?
Corporate Social Responsibility
CSR in operations management means having an operations strategy that will meet the requirements of current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
Lowest:
CSR as philosophy
CSR as risk management
CSR as value creation
Highest
Why CSR?
Why CSR?
It is the right thing to do
Competitiveness reasons:
Improved business reputation
Ability to attract customers
Ability to recruit quality employees
Easier to attract ‘ethical’ investors
Improved employee motivation
United Nations Global Compact, 17 Goals
No poverty
No hunger
Good health and well-being
Quality education
Gender equality
Clean water and sanitation
Affordable and clean energy
Decent work and economic growth
Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
Reduced inequalities
Sustainable cities and communities
Responsible consumption and production
Climate action
Life below water
Life on land
Peace, justice and strong institutions
Partnerships for the goals
United Nations Global Compact, 10 Principles
Human Rights
Principle 1: Businesses should support and respect the protection of internationally proclaimed human rights; and
Principle 2: make sure that they are not complicit in human rights abuses.
Labour
Principle 3: Businesses should uphold the freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining;
Principle 4: the elimination of all forms of forced and compulsory labour;
Principle 5: the effective abolition of child labour; and
Principle 6: the elimination of discrimination in respect of employment and occupation
Environment
Principle 7: Businesses should support a precautionary approach to environmental challenges;
Principle 8: undertake initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility; and
Principle 9: encourage the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies.
Anti-Corruption
Principle 10: Businesses should work against corruption in all its forms, including extortion and bribery.
Life Cycle thinking (5R)
Reduce
Repair
Reuse
Recovery
Recycling
The 4 V of POM (characteristics of operations)
- Volume of output
- Variety of offering
- Variation in demand
- Visibility to customers
Capacity = ?
Capacitiy = time available / time needed for task
Formula Economic Order Quantity?
\(EOQ=\sqrt{\frac{2DC_s}{C_h}}\)
D=Demand (Units)
Cs=Set-up costs per order
Ch=Holding costs per unit
What is ABC classification?
ABC classification is a ranking system for identifying and grouping items in terms of how useful they are for achieving business goals.
The system requires grouping things into three categories:
A - extremely important
B - moderately important
C - relatively unimportant