Title: Capacity and Location Planning
1Chapter 5
- Capacity and Location Planning
2Examples
3Burger King
- Highly variable demand
- During lunch hour, demand can increase from 40 to
800 hamburgers/hour - Limited in ability to used inventory
- Facilities designed for flexible capacity
- During off peak times drive through staffed by
one worker
4Burger King continued
- During lunch hour drive through staffed by up to
five workers who divide up the duties - Second window can be used for customer with
special orders - Average transaction time reduced from 45 to 30
seconds - Sales during peak periods increased 50
5Burger King continued
- Payroll costs as large as food costs
- Need to keep costs low but at same time meet
highly variable demand - BK-50 restaurant is 35 smaller and costs 27
less to build, but can handle 40 more sales with
less labor
6Semiconductor Industry
- Learning from the steel industry
- Both industries require large and expensive
factories - 1980s steel industry started to abandon economies
of scale justification and built minimills - Chipmakers are now constructing smaller and more
automated wafer fabs
7Semiconductor Industry continued
- Short life cycles make it difficult to recoup 2
billion it will cost to build wafer fab in 1998 - Payback time is 22-30 month to conventional wafer
fab versus 10 months for minifab - Processing time can be reduced from 60-90 days to
7 days.
8Mercedes-Benz
- Early 1990s investigated feasibility of producing
luxury sports utility vehicle - Project team established to find location for new
plant - Team charged with finding plant outside of
Germany - Team initially narrowed search to North America
9Mercedes-Benz continued
- Team determined that North America location would
minimize combined labor, shipping, and components
cost - Plans indicated production volume of 65,000
vehicles per year and a breakeven volume of
40,000 vehicles - Sites further narrowed to sites within US
- Close to primary market
10Mercedes-Benz continued
- Minimize penalties associated with currency
fluctuations - 100 sites in 35 state identified
- Primary concern was transportation cost
- Since half production was for export, focused on
sites close to seaports, rail lines, and major
highways
11Mercedes-Benz continued
- Worker age and mix of skills also considered
- Sites narrowed to sites in NC, SC, and AL
- These sites relatively equal in terms of business
climate, education level, transportation, and
long-term costs - AL chosen due to perception of high dedication to
the project
12Geographic Information Systems
- View and analyze data on digital maps
- Retail store in WI analyzed sales data on a map
- The map demonstrated that each store drew
majority of sales from 20 mile radius - Map highlighted area where only 15 of potential
customers had visited one of its stores
13Sport Obermeyer
- Highly volatile demand
- Combined costs of stockouts and markdowns can
exceed manufacturing costs - Determine which items can and cannot be predicted
well - Products that can be predicted produced furthest
in advance - Increased its sales of fashion skiwear 50 to
100 over 3 year period in 1990s
14Insights
- Capacity planning applies to both manufacturing
and service organizations - Capacity options can be categorized as short-term
or long-term - Changing staffing level is short-term
- Building new minifab is long-term
15Insights continued
- Semiconductor industry illustrates the enormous
cost often associated with expanding capacity - Shorter product life cycles add further
complications - Volatile demand can further complicate capacity
planning
16Introduction
- Capacity needs determined on the basis of
forecast of demand. - In addition to determining capacity needed, the
location of the capacity must also be determined. - Mercedes-Benz example illustrates that location
decisions are often made in stages.
17Sport Obermeyer
- Highly volatile demand
- Combined costs of stockouts and markdowns can
exceed manufacturing costs - Determine which items can and cannot be predicted
well - Products that can be predicted produced furthest
in advance - Increased its sales of fashion skiwear 50 to
100 over 3 year period in 1990s
18Forecasting Purposes and Methods
19Primary Uses of Forecasting
- To determine if sufficient demand exists
- To determine long-term capacity needs
- To determine midterm fluctuations in demand so
that short-sighted decisions are not made that
hurt company in long-run - To determine short-term fluctuations in demand
for production planning, workforce scheduling,
and materials planning
20Forecasting Methods
- Informal (intuitive)
- Formal
- Quantitative
- Qualitative
21Forecasting Methods
22Qualitative Methods
- Life cycle
- Surveys
- Delphi
- Historical analogy
- Expert opinion
- Consumer panels
- Test marketing
23Quantitative Methods
- Causal
- Input-output
- Econometric
- Box-Jenkins
- Autoprojection
- Multiplicative
- Exponential smoothing
- Moving average
24Choosing a Forecasting Method
- Availability of representative data
- Time and money limitations
- Accuracy needed
25Long-Term Capacity/Location Planning
26Terminology
- Maximum rate of output of the transformation
system over some specified duration - Capacity issues applicable to all organizations
- Often services cannot inventory output
- Bottlenecks
- Yield (or revenue) management
27Long-term Capacity Planning
- Unit cost as function of facility size
- Economies of scale
- Economies of scope
28Envelope of Lowest Unit Output Costs with
Facility Size
29Demand and Life Cycles for Multiple Outputs
- Demand Seasonality
- Output Life Cycles
30Anti-cyclic Product Sales
31Forecast of Required Organizational Capacity from
Multiple Life Cycles
32Timing of Capacity Increments
33Location Planning Strategies
34Capabilities and the Location Decision
- Often driven too much by short-term
considerations - wage rates
- exchange rates
- Better approach is to consider how location
impacts development of long-term capabilities
35Six Step Process
- Identify sources of value
- Identify capabilities needed
- Assess implications of location decision on
development of capabilities - Identify potential locations
- Evaluate locations
- Develop strategy for building network of locations
36Stage 1 Regional-International
- Minimize transportation costs and provide
acceptable service - Proper supply of labor
- Wage rates
- Unions (right-to-work laws)
- Regional taxes, regulations, trade barriers
- Political stability
37Stage 2 Community
- Availability of acceptable sites
- Local government attitudes
- Regulations, zoning, taxes, labor supply
- Tax Incentives
- Communitys attitude
- Amenities
38Breakeven Location Model
39Stage 3 Site
- Size
- Adjoining land
- Zoning
- Drainage
- Soil
- Availability of water, sewers, utilities
- Development costs
40Weighted Score Model
- Wi importance of factor i
- Si score of location being evaluated on
- factor i
- i an index for the factors
41Locating Pure Service Organizations
- Recipient to Facility
- facility utilization
- travel distance per citizen
- travel distance per visit
- Facility to Recipient
42Short Term Capacity Planning
43Bottlenecks in Sequential Operations
44Efficiency and Output Increase when Machines are
Being Added
45Product and Service Flows
46Process Flow Map for a Service
47Implementing the Theory of Constraints
- Identify the systems constraints
- Exploit the constraint
- Subordinate all else to the constraint
- Elevate the constraint
- If constraint is no longer a bottleneck, find the
next constraint and repeat the steps.
48Relationship between Capacity and Scheduling
- Capacity is oriented toward the acquisition of
productive resources - Scheduling related to the timing of the use of
resources
49Gantt Charts for Capacity Planning and Scheduling
(Infeasible)
50Gantt Charts for Capacity Planning and Scheduling
(Feasible)
51Short-Term Capacity Alternatives
- Increase resources
- Improve resource use
- Modify the output
- Modify the demand
- Do not meet demand
52Increase Resources
- Overtime
- Add shifts
- Employ part-time workers
- Use floating workers
- Subcontract
53Improve Resource Use
- Overlap or stagger shifts
- Schedule appointments
- Inventory output
- Backlog demand
54Modify the Output
- Standardize the output
- Have recipient do part of the work
- Transform service operations into inventoriable
product operations - Cut back on quality
55Demand Options
- Modify the Demand
- change the price
- change the promotion
- Do Not Meet Demand
56Capacity Planning for Services
- Large fluctuations in demand
- Inventory often not an option
- Problem often is to match staff availability with
customer demand - May attempt to shift demand to off-peak periods
- Can measure capacity in terms of inputs
57The Learning Curve
58Background
- In airframe manufacturing industry observed that
each time output doubled, labor hour per plane
decreased by fixed percentage
59Learning Curve Function
- M mNr
- M labor-hours for Nth unit
- m labor-hours for first unit
- N number of units produced
- r exponent of curve
- log(learning rate)/0.693
60Typical Pattern of Learning and Forgetting
61Queuing and the Psychology of Waiting
62Waiting-Line Analysis
- Mechanism to determine several key performance
measures of operating system. - Trade-off two costs
- cost of waiting
- cost of service
63Waiting Line Analysis
64Principles of Waiting
- Unoccupied time feels longer than occupied time.
- Pre-service waiting feels longer than in-service
waiting. - Anxiety makes waiting seem longer.
- Uncertain waiting is longer than known, finite
waiting.
65Principles of Waiting continued
- Unexplained waiting is longer than explained
waiting. - Unfair waiting is longer than fair waiting.
- Solo waiting is longer than group waiting.
- The more valuable the service, the longer it is
worth waiting for.
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