Title: PRODUCTION
1PRODUCTION OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Lokesh Garments, India
2NATURE OF OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
- Factors of production
- Production fundamentals
- Transformation process
- Measuring productivity manufacturing service
- Synthetic analytic techniques
3Who Makes the Best Products? Survey says...
Survey of 20,000 customers in 20 countries
38.5
Japan
Germany
36
United States
34.3
Britain
21.9
France
20.6
18.3
Canada
4PRODUCTION IS THE CREATION OF GOODS SERVICES
USING THE FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
5The Factors of Production
- Land
- Labor
- Capital
- Entrepreneurship
- Information
6Production Fundamentals
- Form Utility - raw materials, labor and other
inputs are used to create goods and services (see
p. 280) - Production - a broad term to describe the
creative process of industries producing goods
and services - Manufacturing - is the process of making goods
using labor and/or machines
7The Production and Operations Process
Metal
Manufacturing
Plastics
Wire
Wire
Service
8MEASURING PRODUCTIVITY IN THE SERVICE SECTOR
- Services are labor intensive
- Difficult to measure productivity
- Belief productivity is rising but behind
manufacturing productivity - Trend toward automation of services
- Examples banking, grocery checkout, airline
reservation processing -
9Synthetic and Analytic Production Systems
Automobiles
Pizza
Jeans
Timber
Meat packing
Crude Oil
10PLANNING DESIGNING OPERATIONS SYSTEMS
- Planning the product
- Designing the operations process
- Standardization
- modular design
- customization
- Planning capacity
11PLANNING FACILITIES
- Facility Location
- Facility Layout
- Fixed-position layout (project organization)
- Process layout (intermittent organization)
- Product layout (continuous manufacturing
organizations - Technology
12Modern Production Techniques
- Just-In-Time (JIT) Inventory Control - working
with suppliers to reduce Inventory - Flexible Manufacturing - using machines that can
do multiple tasks report of other half of class - Lean Manufacturing - using less raw material
- Mass Customization - tailoring products to the
customer - Competing in Time - shorter delivery times
- Computer Aided Design and Manufacturing - design
and manufacture products more cheaply - Computer Integrated Manufacturing - robotics is
cheaper
13MANAGING LOGISTICS
- Purchasing
- Managing inventory finished goods,
work-in-progress raw materials inventory - Inventory control EOQ, JIT, MRP
- Routing scheduling
14SCHEDULING TECHNIQUES
- PERT Program Evaluation Review Technique
critical path analysis - The Gantt Chart bar graph
15A Hypothetical PERT Diagram for a McDonalds Big
Mac
9-13
16MANAGING QUALITY
- Traditional view complex process sampling
viewed as control system - Contemporary view defined as measure of
consumer satisfaction over lifetime of the
product quality control circles common - Commitment to quality recognition that
productivity quality go hand in hand total
quality management
17RELATIONSHIP PRODUCTIVITY QUALITY
- Can an enterprise concentrate on both
productivity quality? - Definition of productivity measure of output
- Definition of quality measure of the consistency
with which the manufacturing process meets a
specified target or standard
18EXAMPLE OF RELATIONSHIP
DEFINITION OF PRODUCTIVITY P O TRADITIONAL
VIEW P-Q O-1 CONTEMPORARY VIEW P Q O 1
19Total Quality Management (TQM)
- All levels must be involved and committed
- Doing it right the first time to lower costs
- Employees must cooperate to develop a new
Corporate Culture - Demands commitment to Continuous Improvement (CI)
- Involve suppliers and distributors
20SOLVE THE DILEMMA PLANNING FOR PIZZA
- What mistake did McKing make in approaching the
introduction of pizza? - How could this product introduction have been
coordinated to avoid the problems that were
encountered? - If you were an executive at McKing how would you
proceed with the introduction of pizza into the
restaurants?
21VIDEODIAMONDS ON ICE
22QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
- What are the planning considerations that were
required in the building of the Diavik Diamond
Mine? - What ethical questions social responsibility
considerations do you find in the Diavik Diamond
project as reported in the video?
23SITUATION IN CANADA
24Canadas Manufacturing Sector
- Manufacturing is an important sector of our
economy - Countries with high standards of living have
strong manufacturing sectors - Our manufacturing sector is involved in fierce
international competition - Our manufacturing sector must adopt the latest
technologies to compete in the new global economy
25CHARACTERISTICS OF CANADIAN INDUSTRY
- Types of industries processes
- Extractive industries, analytic process,
fabricating process, synthetic process, assembly
process - Location of goods-producing industries
- Concentrated in southern Ontario and Quebec near
the St. Lawrence river - Factors general (proximity to raw materials,
markets, labor energy specific vicinity or
community (tax structures, regulations, commuting
services) plant location itself (cost of land,
adequacy of all utilities)
26MAJOR CHALLENGE TO CANADA
- Past resources automotive sectors kept Canada
competitive - Present no longer the case
- Problems to overcome brain drain to the States,
branch plant economy (inhibits RD), inadequate
training - 2006 report companies not doing enough to
raise productivity little spent on new
machinery and equipment
27Our Challenge - To Become More Competitive
- Reduce the Cost of Inputs
- Reduce the Amount of Inputs
- Increase the Value of Outputs
- Increase the Amount of Outputs
28Reducing Inputs
- New technology
- Better management of resources
- Site selection - closer to cheap labor, closer to
customers, closer to cheap raw materials, moving
to a lower tax jurisdiction - Better materials handling
- Reducing and improving inventory handling
29Increasing the Value or Volume of Outputs
- Efficient design and engineering
- Improved marketing - better and more saleable
products - Well-motivated workforce that is more productive
- Research and Development
- Restructuring the Organization
30Current and Future Trends
- The labor intensive service sector begins to
automate - ATMs at banks - Job Descriptions - less rigid so that the company
can be more flexible - More Hi-Tech workers - IT skills are in short
supply - More Participative Management style will require
more people skills of managers
31COVERAGE FOR 15/3/2006
- TOPIC Motivating the Work Force
- Reading chapter 9
- Class Activities
- Solve the Dilemma Motivating to Win, p. 236
- Build Your Skills Motivating, p. 243
- Video Loyalty in the Workplace, p. 244