Title: Operations
1Lesson 2 12/10/2002
2Website
- http//www.vub.ac.be/BEDR/cmach.html
- http//www.vub.ac.be/BEDR/download.html
3Topics
4Chapter 2 Developing an Operations Strategy
- Identify the competitive priorities required to
support the business strategy
- Common priorities include
- Cost
- Quality
- Time
- Flexibility
5Strategy exercise Automobile
- Ferrari and Ford Mercedes and Toyota
- Ferrari and Mercedes
- Quality, customization and exclusivity
- Supporting operational decision research
(higher costs), TQM
- Ford and Toyota
- Speed of delivery, cost
- Just-in-time, mass production/customization
6Books
- Fnac and waterstone
- Fnac
- Price
- Mass volumes, large distribution network
- Waterstone
- Quality
- Good selection
7Transport industry
- De Post and DHL
- De Post
- (price?), accessibility
- Labor-intensive
- DHL
- Flexibility, quality
- TQM, high training of the workforce
8Airlines
- Ryanair and KLM Virgin Express and Ryanair
- Ryanair
- Price
- No use of travel agents, e-booking, aggressive
marketing, regional airports, short distances
- KLM
- Quality
- Highly qualified personnel
- Flexibility in ticketing, rescheduling, etc.
- Virgin Express
- Flexibility
- Good booking facilities, good on-board facilities
9Retailers/supermarkets
- Aldi and Carrefour Delhaize and Colruyt Wall
Mart and Delhaize Delhaize and Aldi
- Aldi and Colruyt
- Price
- No shelfs, very few personnel, minimal
infrastructure, no bags, only one or two brands
for one type of product, food
- Delhaize
- Quality
- Nice environment, quality of service, quality
control through external partners
- Wall Mart
- Price and open 24 hours a day
- Cooperation with suppliers supply chain
management
- Carrefour
- Flexibility?
- Large amount and variety of products, also non
food
10Fast food
- Mac Donalds and Ekki Tasty and Quick Goodys
and Mac Donalds Mac Donalds and Quick Pizza Hut
and Mac Donalds
- All
- Speed and cost
- Standardized production proces, quality control,
conformance and consistency
11Product Design Process Selection
C H A P T E R
12Learning Objectives
- Explain the strategic impact of product design
- Understand the steps in product design
- Apply break-even analysis to guide
decision-making
- Identify the characteristics of different
production processes
- Illustrate process flowcharting
13Continuum of Process Types
- Projects
- Used for one-at-a-time products made exactly to
customer specifications
- Batch processes
- Used for small quantities (batches) with a high
level of customization
- Line processes
- Used for relatively high volumes with little
customization
- Continuous processes
- Used for very high volume standardized products
(often commodities)
14Continuum of Process Types
15Supply Chain Management
C H A P T E R
16Learning Objectives
- Describe supply chains and SCM
- Describe the bullwhip effect and the role of
information sharing in SCM
- Describe the role of vertical integration and
outsourcing
- Describe the role of purchasing in SCM
- Describe the technologies used in information
sharing
- Describe the role of warehouses in supply chains
- Describe trends in SCM
17What is a Supply Chain?
- A network of activities that deliver a finished
product or service to the customer.
- The connected links of external suppliers,
internal processes, and external distributors.
18Components of a Typical Supply Chain
External Suppliers
Internal Functions
External Distributors
19A Basic Supply Chain
20Supply Chain Management
- Supply Chain Management entails
- Coordinating the movement of goods and delivery
of services.
- Sharing information between members of the supply
chain.
- For example sales, forecasts, promotional
campaigns, and inventory levels.
21Supply Chain for Milk Products
22External Suppliers
- External suppliers provide the necessary raw
materials, services, and component parts.
- Purchased materials services frequently
represent 50 (or more) of the costs of goods
sold.
- Suppliers are frequently members of several
supply chains often in different roles.
23External Suppliers
- Tier one suppliers
- Directly supplies materials or services to the
firm that does business with the final customer
- Tier two suppliers
- Provides materials or services to tier one
suppliers
- Tier three suppliers
- Providers materials or services to tier two
suppliers
24Internal Functions
- Vary by industry firm, but might include
- Processing
- Purchasing
- Production Planning Control
- Quality Assurance
- Shipping
25Logistics Distribution
- Logistics getting the right material to the
right place at the right time in the right
quantity
- Traffic Management
- The selection, scheduling control of carriers
(e.g. trucks rail) for both incoming
outgoing materials products
- Distribution Management
- The packaging, storing handling of products in
transit to the end-user.
26Information Sharing
- Supply chain partners can benefit by sharing
information on sales, demand forecasts, inventory
levels marketing campaigns
- Inaccurate or distorted information leads to the
Bullwhip Effect
27Typical Information Flow
28The Bullwhip Effect
- Farther away from the customer, the quality of
information gets worse worse as supply chain
members base their guesses on the bad guesses of
their partners. - The result is increasingly inefficient inventory
management, manufacturing, logistics
29The Bullwhip Effect
- If information isnt shared, everyone has to
guess what is going on downstream.
- Guessing wrong leads to too much or too little
inventory
- If too much, firms hold off buying more until
inventories fall (leading suppliers to think
demand has fallen).
- If too little, firms demand a rush order order
more than usual to avoid being caught short in
the future (leading suppliers to think demand has
risen).
30Short-Circuit the Bullwhip
- Make information transparent
- Use Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) to support
Just-In-Time supplier replenishment
- Use bar codes electronic scanning to capture
share point-of-sale data
- Eliminate wholesale price promotions quantity
discounts
- Allocate scarce items in proportion to past sales
to avoid attempts to game the system
31Electronic Data Interchange
- The most common method of using
computer-to-computer links to exchange data
between supply chain partners in a standardized
format. - Benefits include
- Quick transfer of information
- Reduced paperwork administration
- Improved data accuracy tracking capability
- Reduced clerical costs
- Improved communications
32Vertical Integration
- A measure of how much of the supply chain is
controlled by the manufacturer.
- Backward integration
- Acquiring control of raw material suppliers.
- Forward integration
- Acquiring control of distribution channels.
33Outsourcing
- Entails paying third-party suppliers to provide
raw materials and services, rather than making
them in-house.
- Outsourcing is increasing as many firms try to
focus their internal operations on what they do
best.
34Whether to Outsource?
- What volume is required?
- Are items of similar quality available in the
marketplace?
- Is long-term demand for the item stable?
- Is the item critical to success of the firm?
- Does the item represent a core competency of the
firm?
35Breakeven Analysis
36Break-Even Analysis
37Example The Bagel Shop
- Nic Ann plan to open a small bagel shop.
- The local baker has offered to sell them bagels
at 40 cents each. However, they will need to
invest 1,000 in bread racks to transport the
bagels back forth from the bakery to their
store. - Alternatively, they can bake the bagels at their
store for 15 cents each if they invest 15,000 in
kitchen equipment.
- They expect to sell 60,000 bagels each year.
- What should they do?
38Example Solved
- Interpretation
- They anticipate selling 60,000 bagels (greater
than the indifference point of 56,000).
- Therefore, make the bagels in-house.
39Developing a Supply Base
- How to chose between suppliers?
- One supplier or many per item?
- Whether to partner with suppliers?
40Criteria for Choosing Suppliers
- Cost
- Cost per unit transaction costs
- Quality
- Conformance to specifications
- On-time delivery
- Speed predictability
41Arguments for One Supplier per Item
- May only be one practical source for the item
- Patent issues, geography, or quality
considerations
- Contract might bind you to using only one
supplier
- The supply chain is integrated to support JIT or
EDI
- Making multiple suppliers impractical
- Availability of quantity discounts
- Supplier may be more responsive if its
guaranteed all your business for the item
- Deliveries may be scheduled more easily
42Arguments for Multiple Suppliers per Item
- No single supplier may have sufficient capacity
- Competition may result in better pricing or
service
- Multiple suppliers spreads the risk of supply
chain interruption
- Eliminates purchasers dependence on a single
source of supply
- Provides greater volume flexibility
- Government regulation may require multiple
suppliers
- Antitrust issues
- Allows testing new suppliers without risking a
complete disruption of material flow
43Partnering with Suppliers
- Involves developing a long-term,
mutually-beneficial relationship
- Requires trust to share information, risk,
opportunities, investing in compatible
technology
- Work together to reduce waste and inefficiency
develop new products
- Agree to share the gains
44The Role of Warehouses
- General Warehouses
- Used for long-term storage of goods with minimal
handling
- Distribution Warehouses for moving and mixing
goods
- 3 Roles
- Transportation consolidation
- Consolidate LTL into TL deliveries
- Product mixing blending
- Group multiple items from various suppliers
- Improve service
- Reduced response time
- Allow for last-minute customization
45Factors affecting supply chain management in the
future
- Consumer expectations and competition
- Globalization
- Information technology
- Governement regulations
- Environment
46Future Challenges
- Household Replenishment
- Fulfilling consumer demand at the point of use
(the home).
- Often called the last mile problem.
- Freeze Point Delay (Postponement)
- Last minute customization to provide exactly what
the consumer wants while maintaining very small
inventories
47Other future developments
- E-commerce reduction of inventories of
thousands retail outlets around the world
- Virtual organisations provide core functions
and outsources everything else
- Outsourcing non-core businesses
- Partnering with suppliers
- Technology gathering and collection of accurate
data
48Intermodal transport
Intermodality
- the movement of goods in one and the same loading
unit or vehicle which uses succesively several
modes of transport without handling the goods
themselves in changing modes
49Intermodal transport chain
50Units
- containers
- swapbodies
- semi-trailer
- lorries
- TEU Twenty foot Equivalent Unit based on a
6-metre-long standard container
51Swapbody
52Terminals in Belgium
53Inland waterway/road terminals
- Started before 1998
- Actif from 1999
- Projects
54Total Quality Management
C H A P T E R
55Learning Objectives
- Define Total Quality Management (TQM)
- Identify the TQM philosophy
- Describe the four dimensions of quality
- Identify the costs of quality
- Describe problem-solving tools
- Describe quality certifications
56What is TQM?
- Total Quality Management
- An integrated effort designed to improve quality
performance at every level of the organization.
- Customer-defined quality
- The meaning of quality as defined by the customer.
57Defining Quality
- Conformance to Specifications
- How well the product or service meets the targets
and tolerances determined by its designers
- Fitness for Use
- Definition of quality that evaluates how well the
product performs for its intended use.
- Value for Price Paid
- Quality defined in terms of product or service
usefulness for the price paid.
58Defining Quality
- Support Services
- Quality defined in terms of the support provided
after the product or service is purchased
- Psychological Criteria
- A way of defining quality that focuses on
judgmental evaluations of what constitutes
product or service excellence.
59Manufacturing vs. Service
- Manufacturing produces a tangible product
- Quality is often defined by tangible
characteristics
- Conformance, Performance, Reliability, Features
- Service produces an intangible product
- Quality is often defined by perceptual factors
- Courtesy, Friendliness, Promptness, Atmosphere,
Consistency
60Changing Focus of Quality Management
61Overview of TQM Philosophy
- Focus on identifying root causes of reoccurring
problems correcting them
- A proactive, not reactive approach
- Allow customers to determine whats important
(customer-driven quality)
- Involve everyone in the organization
62TQM Philosophy
- Maintain a Customer Focus
- Identify and meet current customer needs
- Continually gather data (look for changing
preferences)
- Continuous Improvement
- Continually strive to improve
- Good enough, isnt good enough
- Quality at the Source
- Find the source of quality problems correct
them
63TQM Philosophy
- Employee Empowerment
- Empower all employees to find quality problems
and correct them
- Focus on internal external customer needs
- External customers
- People who purchase the companys goods and
services
- Internal customers
- Other downstream employees who rely on preceding
employees to do their job
64TQM Philosophy
- Understanding Quality Tools
- All employees should be trained to properly
utilize quality control tools
- Team Approach
- Quality is an organization-wide effort
- Quality circles work groups acting as
problem-solving teams
- Benchmarking
- Studying the business practices of other
companies for purposes of comparison.
65TQM Philosophy
- Manage Supplier Quality
- Ensuring that suppliers engage in the same high
quality practices
- Strategic partnering with key suppliers
66Four dimensions of quality
- Quality of Design
- Determining which features will be included in
the final design of a product to meet customers
needs preferences
- Quality of Conformance to Design
- Degree to which the product conforms to its
design specifications (a measure of consistency
lack of variation)
67Four dimensions of quality
- Ease of Use
- Ergonomics, easy to understand directions, etc.
- Post-Sale Service
- Assisting with issues that arise after the
purchase
- Warranty repair issues, follow through on any
promises to build a continuing relationship with
the customer
68Costs of Quality
69Ways to Improve Quality
- PDSA Cycle Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle
- Quality Function Deployment
- Problem-solving tools
70Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle (PDSA)
71Plan-Do-Study-Act Cycle (PDSA)
- Plan Plan experiments to uncover the root cause
of problems
- Do Conduct the experiments
- Study Study the data generated
- Act Implement improvements or start over
- Repeat Continuously improve
72Quality Function Deployment
- Compares customer requirements products
characteristics
- Understand how the product delivers quality to
the customer
73Comparing Voices
Voice of the Engineer
Voice of the Customer
Customer-based Benchmarks
74Setting Specifications
Trade-offs
Technical Benchmarks
Targets
75QFD
- In addition, QFD
- Provides for competitive evaluation (benchmarks)
- Considers design trade-offs synergies
- Facilitates target setting developing product
specifications
76Problem Solving Tools
- Cause-and-Effect Diagrams
- Flow Charts
- Check Lists
- Control Charts
- Scatter Diagrams
- Pareto Charts
- Histograms
77Cause-and-Effect Diagrams
- Also called Fishbone Diagrams
- Help identify potential causes of specific
effects (quality problems)
78Flow Charts
- Diagrams of the steps involved in an operation or
process
79Example
80Checklists
- Simple forms used to record the appearance of
common defects and the number of occurrences
81Control Charts
- Track whether a process is operating as expected
82Scatter Diagrams
- Illustrate how two variables are related to each
other
83Pareto Analysis
- Helps identify the degree of importance of
different quality problems
84Histograms
- Illustrate a frequency distribution
85Quality Standards
- ISO 9000 Standards
- Set of internationally recognized quality
standards
- Companies are periodically audited certified
- ISO 14000
- Focuses on a companys environmental
responsibility
- QS 9000
- Auto industrys version of ISO 9000
86Why TQM effort fail
- Lack of genuine quality culture
- Lack of top management support and commitment
- Over- and under reliance on statistical process
control (SPC) methods
87Statistical Quality Control
C H A P T E R
88Learning Objectives
- Describe quality control methods
- Understand the use of statistical process control
- Describe apply control charts
- Distinguish x-bar, R, p and c-charts
- Define process capability
- Describe apply capability indexes
- Define six-sigma capability
89Statistical quality control
- Descriptive statistics
- Used to describe distributions of data
- Acceptance sampling
- Used to accept or reject entire batches by only
inspecting a few items
- Statistical process control (SPC)
- Used to determine whether a process is performing
as expected
90Sources of variation
- Common causes of variation based on common
causes that we can not identify. These causes are
unavoidable and are due to slight differences in
processing - Assignable causes of variation Causes that can
be identified and eliminated. E.g. Machine that
needs to be readjusted, employee that need more
training
91Descriptive Statistics
- Mean (x-bar)
- The average or central tendency of a data set
- Standard deviation (sigma)
- Describes the amount of spread or observed
variation in the data set
- Range
- Another measure of spread
- The range measures the difference between the
largest smallest observed values in the data set
92Equations
93Impact of Standard Deviation
94Skewed Distributions (One Form of Non-Normal
Distribution)
95Statistical Process Control Methods
- Control charts
- Use statistical limits to identify when a sample
of data falls within a normal range of variation
96The Normal Distribution
97Setting Limits RequiresBalancing Risks
- Control limits are based on a willingness to
think somethings wrong, when its actually not
(Type I or alpha error), balanced against the
sensitivity of the tool - the ability to quickly
reveal a problem (failure is Type II or beta
error)
98Types of Data
- Variable level data
- Can be measured using a continuous scale
- Examples length, weight, time, temperature
- Attribute level data
- Can only be described by discrete
characteristics
- Example defective not defective
99Control Charts for Variable Data
- Mean (x-bar) charts
- Tracks the central tendency (the average value
observed) over time
- Range (R) charts
- Tracks the spread of the distribution over time
(estimates the observed variation)
100x-Bar Computations
101Example
- Assume the standard deviation of the process is
given as 1.13 cl
- Management wants a 3-sigma chart (only 0.26
chance of alpha error)
- Observed values shown in the table are in cl.
102Computations
- Center line (x-double bar)
- Control limits
1032nd Method Using R-bar
104Control Chart Factors
105Example
106Computations
107Example x-bar Chart
108R-chart Computations(Use D3 D4 Factors Table
6-1)
109Control Chart Factors
110Example R-chart
111Using x-bar R-charts
- Use together
- Reveal different problems
112Control Charts for Attribute Data
- p-Charts
- Track the proportion defective in a sample
- c-Charts
- Track the average number of defects per unit of
output
113Process Capability
- A measure of the ability of a process to meet
preset design specifications
- Determines whether the process can do what we are
asking it to do
- Design specifications (a/k/a tolerance limits)
- Preset by design engineers to define the
acceptable range of individual product
characteristics (e.g. physical dimensions,
elapsed time, etc.) - Based upon customer expectations how the
product works (not statistics!)
114Measuring Process Capability
- Compare the width of design specifications
observed process output
115Capability Indexes
- Centered Process (Cp)
- Cp1 the process variability just meets
specifications
- Cp1 Process variability is outside the range of
specifications (see (b))
- Cp1 Process variability is tighter than
specifications
116Example
- Design specifications call for a target value of
16.0 /-0.2 microns (USL 16.2 LSL 15.8)
- Observed process output has a mean of 15.9 and a
standard deviation of 0.1 microns
117Capability Indexes
118Computations
119Three Sigma Capability
- Until now, we assumed process output should be
modeled as /- 3 standard deviations
- By doing so, we ignore the 0.26 of output that
falls outside /- 3 sigma range
- The result a 3-sigma capable process produces
2600 defects for every million units produced
120Six Sigma Capability
- Six sigma capability assumes the process is
capable of producing output where /- 6 standard
deviations fall within the design specifications
(even when the mean output drifts up to 1.5
standard deviations off target) - The result only 3.4 defects for every million
produced
1213-Sigma versus 6-Sigma
122Acceptance sampling
- Before the process sampling materials received
from suppliers
- After the process sampling finished items that
are to be shipped either to a customer or to a
distribution center
123Sampling plans
- A plan for acceptance sampling that precisely
specifies the parameters of the sampling process
and the acceptance/rejection criteria
- The size of the lot (N)
- The size of the sample inspected from the lot
(n)
- The number of defects above which a lot is
rejected (c)
- The number of samples
124Setting Limits RequiresBalancing Risks
- Control limits are based on a willingness to
think somethings wrong, when its actually not
(Type I or alpha error), balanced against the
sensitivity of the tool - the ability to quickly
reveal a problem (failure is Type II or beta
error)
125Risks
- Consumer risk the probability that a lot will
be accepted that is in fact bad Type II error or
?
- Producers risk the probability that a lot will
be rejected that is in fact good- Type I error
(a)
126Operating Characteristic (OC) Curves
OC Curve with N1000,n5, c1
A graph that shows the probability or chance of
accepting a lot given various proportions of
defects in the lot.