P1246990942qKdoe - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

P1246990942qKdoe

Description:

Making jigsaw puzzles consists of three major steps: making puzzle pieces, ... Production Process for Jigsaw Puzzle Making. Photos courtesy of Andrews Products, Inc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:157
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: dps4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: P1246990942qKdoe


1
OM
CHAPTER 5
TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
DAVID A. COLLIER AND JAMES R. EVANS
2
Chapter 5 Learning Outcomes
l e a r n i n g o u t c o m e s
LO1 Describe different types of technology and
their role in manufacturing and service
operations. LO2 Explain how manufacturing and
service technology is strengthening the
value chain. LO3 Describe different types of
integrated operating systems (IOS). LO4
Explain the benefits and challenges of using
technology. LO5 Describe the processes of
technology development and adoption.
3
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • man had his head blown off, said
    John Brodbeck, who was 5 years old
    in 1930 when the steam engine blew up at his farm
    in Michigan. In the early
    1900sthe height of steam-powered tractor
    useexplosions were common, averaging two a day
    in the United States in 1911, according to
    Diotima Booraem of the Smithsonian Institution in
    Washington D.C. The new technology of the 1910s
    was not safe and few people knew how to truly
    operate steam engines. The first agricultural
    steam engines arrived in the 1850s and were
    pulled by horses. By the 1890s, a steam-engine
    tractor could plow up to 75 acres per day, more
    than 20 times the productivity of pulling a plow
    using horses. By the 1920s, production of steam
    engines dwindled and none were sold by the end of
    the decade, replaced by gas-powered engines and
    tractors.

What do you think? In what ways has technology
benefited your life and work as a student?
4
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Understanding technology in operations is
    critical for several reasons
  • Virtually everything that is done in a business
    depends on some type of technology.
  • Technology is evolving at an extremely rapid
    pace.
  • Technological innovation in goods, services,
    manufacturing, and service delivery is a
    competitive necessity.

5
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Hard technology refers to equipment and devices
    that perform a variety of tasks in the creation
    and delivery of goods and services.
  • Soft technology is the application of the
    Internet, computer software, and information
    systems to provide data, information, and
    analysis and to facilitate the accomplishment of
    creating and delivering goods and services.

6
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Manufacturing Technology Tours
  • Making jigsaw puzzles consists of three major
    steps making puzzle pieces, making puzzle boxes,
    and final assembly (see diagram on next slide).
  • Manufacturing motorcycle transmission gears
    Mazak machining center can operate unattended for
    hourshighly automated production (see diagram on
    slide 8).
  • Many manufacturing industries use specialized
    technology.

7
Production Process for Jigsaw Puzzle Making
8
Examples of Machining Technology
9
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Service Technology
  • Service technologies are used behind the scenes
    to facilitate your experience as a customer.
  • E-service refers to using the Internet and
    technology to provide services that create and
    deliver time, place, information, entertainment,
    and exchange value to customers and/or support
    the sale of goods.

10
Examples of Service Technology
Exhibit Extra
11
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Service Technology
  • Many health care facilities are adopting
    electronic medical record (EMR) systems that can
    be easily integrated with medical records,
    billing, patient scheduling, and accounting (see
    text box).
  • Technology at UPS such as handheld devices,
    UPSnet, UPS Mail, etc. (see text box).

12
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Technology in Value Chains
  • Three major types of business relationships
  • B2B Business to Business
  • B2C Business to Customer
  • C2C Customer to Customer
  • Electronic transaction capability allows all
    parts of the value chain to immediately know and
    react to changes in demand and supply.

13
E-Commerce View of the Value Chain
Exhibit 5.1
14
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • An IOS focus is on the main problem structure and
    processes of a specific industry, such as home
    insurance, airlines, family practice medical
    doctors, or automobile manufacturers.
  • An IOS addresses key decisions that need to be
    made to serve the customer in the best possible
    way.

15
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • An IOS involves the collection, storage,
    analysis, and dissemination of data and
    information via information technology to improve
    decision-making within the organization.
  • An IOS is capable of making key decisions in a
    synchronous and timely way anywhere along the
    value chain.

16
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • Computer-integrated manufacturing systems (CIMS)
    represent the union of hardware, software,
    database management, and communications to
    automate and control production activities.
  • A robot is a programmable machine designed to
    handle materials or tools in the performance of a
    variety of tasks.

17
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • Computer-Integrated Manufacturing Systems (CIMS)
    (continued)
  • CAD/CAE enables engineers to design, analyze,
    test, simulate, and manufacture products before
    they physically exist.
  • CAM involves computer control of the
    manufacturing process.
  • Flexible manufacturing systems (FMS) consist of
    two or more computer-controlled machines linked
    by automated handling devices.

18
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
    integrate all aspects of a businessaccounting,
    customer relationship management, supply chain
    management, manufacturing, sales, human
    resourcesinto a unified information system and
    provide more timely analysis and reporting of
    sales, customer, inventory, manufacturing, human
    resource, and accounting data.

19
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
  • Two prominent vendors of ERP software are SAP and
    Oracle.
  • ERP allows departments to share information and
    communicate with each other easily.
  • ERP is not about software, but about changing the
    way the organization and its operations are
    managed.

20
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • Customer relationship management (CRM) is a
    business strategy designed to learn more about
    customers wants, needs, and behaviors in order
    to build customer relationships and loyalty, and
    ultimately enhance revenues and profits.

21
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Integrated Operating System (IOS)
  • CRM helps firms gain and maintain a competitive
  • advantage by
  • Segmenting markets based on characteristics
  • Tracking sales trends and advertising
    effectiveness
  • Forecasting customer retention rates and
    providing feedback as to why customers leave the
    company
  • Studying which goods and services are purchased
    together
  • Linking the information to competitive priorities
    by market segment, and process and value chain
    performance

22
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
Integrated Operating System (IOS) A revenue
management system (RMS) consists of dynamic
methods to forecast demand, allocate perishable
assets across market segments, decide when to
overbook and by how much, and determine what
price to charge different customer (price)
classes.
23
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Four Components of RMS
  • Forecasting
  • Allocation
  • Overbooking
  • Pricing
  • Modern RMS software simultaneously makes changes
    in these decisions in a real-time operating
    system.
  • RMS is used to determine price for hotel rooms,
    airline seats, rental cars, sporting events or
    concert seats, cruise line rooms, broadcast
    advertising, power generation, and so on.

24
Example Benefits and Challenge of Adopting
Technology
Exhibit 5.2
25
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • Making Technology Decisions
  • Scalability is a measure of the contribution
    margin required to deliver a good or service as
    the business grows and volumes increase.
  • High scalability is the capability to serve
    additional customers at zero or extremely low
    incremental costs (e.g., Monster.com).
  • Low scalability implies that serving additional
    customers requires high incremental variable
    costs (see WebVan).
  • Many of the dot.coms that failed in the year 2000
    had low scalability and unsustainable demand.

26
Chapter 5 Technology and Operations Management
  • How Intel describes the history of technology
  • revolutions
  • Stage I. Birth
  • Stage II. Turbulence
  • Stage III. Build-out
  • Examples
  • Global Digital Revolution (see text box)
  • U.S. Railroad Industry

27
Basic Manufacturing Technology
Exhibit 5.3
Case Contrasting Manufacturing Technology
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com