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Managing Efficiency, Processes

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Time and motion study. Charles Bedaux. Work measurement. Chris Jarvis. 10. mg2066 ... start a Time Study sheet & break work task into 'units' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Efficiency, Processes


1
Managing Efficiency, Processes Productivity
2
Work Study
  • generic term for management services and system
    engineering techniques, used to investigate
  • methods of performing work (method study) and
    improve its efficiency and economy
  • the time taken to do it (work measurement) with a
    view to rationalization, routinisation,
    utilisation, cost and incentive improvement
  • the worker-work system-technology relationship
    how this is best designed and improved
    (ergonomics and the human-machine-information
    interfaces)

3
Productivity
  • a measure of performance.
  • broadly a ratio of output to input, i.e.
    comparing amount produced (output) with resources
    used (input)
  • materials, machinery, labour, capital, energy
    --- a combination
  • What improvements have there been over the last
    50 years in
  • construction productivity
  • payroll processing
  • Car servicing
  • banking
  • How do we evaluate productivity levels and
    identify areas for improvement?

4
A work study curriculum - 1
  • historical development commitments of Work
    Study
  • basic concepts, objectives and procedures
  • Method Study approaches and tools of Method
    Analyst
  • Flow Diagrams Process Charts etc
  • Critical questioning techniques
  • Work Measurement and calculating times for Jobs
  • Defining job elements calculating
  • performance rating and standard/basic times
  • Determining allowances fatigue, unavoidable
    avoidable delays, extra allowances
  • various incentive plans

5
A work study curriculum - 2
  • examining worker-machine relationships
  • workload line balancing staff/machine
    inefficiencies
  • material handling, human controls, tools and
    devices
  • Workstation layout design (EU work-station
    directive)
  • Occupation Health Safetysignals, reaction
    times, eyes, backs, RSI safety criteria,
    preventing accidents
  • Ergonomics human-machine-environment interfaces
  • use of visual displays for dynamic information
  • Designing for lighting systems, industrial
    noise, thermal controls, vibration etc
  • Systems analysis the human-machine information
    system
  • data capture and processing
  • design of the user interface
  • Business process re-engineering (BPR)

6
System relationships
Process analysis
Engineer workflows
Design work station information arrangements
Method study
Plant layout
Jobs
Time study
Work breakdowns
Incentive rewards
standard times
7
Nature of the Theory
  • organised common sense, human ingenuity
    creation of tools
  • functional and assumed to be neutral/unemotional
  • critical questioning taking nothing for granted
  • focus on efficiencies, utilisation and costs
  • predictability and control over quality
  • maximise use (utilisation) of compliant labour
    capital - unit costing
  • machine economic man vs. social/sentient

Separation of worker from means of production
8
Opposition to Work Study
  • All work is different - idiographic vs/
    nomothetic
  • Large firm/employer and large engineered systems
    only
  • Work study is obsolete
  • It is exploitative of workers
  • It has never been and never will be accepted here

Is this so? What is the evidence of work study in
the world around you
9
Pioneers of efficiency measurement systems
  • Gunpowder manufacture
  • Chinese ceramics industry
  • Adam Smith observations of French - pin making
  • Pioneers of agrarian and industrial revolutions
  • Abraham Derby Josiah Wedgwood
  • Madame Guillotine, Springfield Rifle
  • F W Taylor at Bethlehem Steel work
  • Henry Gantt
  • Frank and Lillian Gilbreth
  • Time and motion study
  • Charles Bedaux
  • Work measurement

10
Methods, times and systems for performance
  • improve methods - get it right
  • Method study
  • O M Ergonomics
  • Industrial systems engineering
  • define maintain work standards
  • incentive schemes e.g. piece work measured day
    work
  • human-computer interface systems analysis
    design
  • rationalisation, automation substitution of
    machine technologies for people

Braverman and de-skilling in the labour process
11
Method study
  • Select job/process to be examined observe
    current performance
  • high process cost, bottlenecks, tortuous route,
    low productivity, erratic quality
  • Record document facts
  • activities performed
  • operators involved - how etc
  • equipment and tools used
  • materials processed or moved
  • apply critical examination - challenge job
    components necessity (purpose, place, sequence,
    method).
  • develop alternative methods present proposals
  • document as base for new work system
  • Install, monitor (slippage) maintain

Process re-engineering? Risk assessment for
safety?
12
ASME Symbols and Process Charting
Operation
Move
Delay
Store
Inspect/ process
Decision
13
Traditional OM critical examination questions
  • Purpose
  • What, Why, What else might Should be done ?
  • Place
  • Where, Why, Where else Where should it be done
    ?
  • Sequence
  • When, Why then, When else could When should ?
  • People
  • Who, Why, Who else might should do it?
  • Method
  • How, Why, How else could, How else should
  • a sound reason for every activity
  • no assumptions so double check
  • quality, safety and health must not compromised

14
Other types of process modelling
  • multiple activity charts
  • string diagrams
  • 3-dimensional models
  • recording methods - video,etc
  • computer-based modeling

15
Measuring Work
  • Why define/measure work?
  • standard, reliable methods
  • control performance quality
  • obtain predictability
  • defined labour costs performance
  • set pay rates provide data for effort-reward
    relationship
  • Why set standard times
  • assumptions about competent, motivated workers
  • be clear about "allowances" fatigue
  • Toyota Avensis 10000 mile service
  • MOT testing
  • Service times queue management
  • Banks
  • Airline check-in
  • Call centres
  • Out-sourcing service level agreements
  • Work-load balancing
  • Work related bonuses

16
Work Measurement
  • techniques to establish the time for a qualified,
    motivated worker to carry out a task at a
    defined rate of working.
  • time Study
  • establish standard times - management knowledge
  • rate operator performance - criteria for
    appraisal
  • gather information to calculate production
    capabilities data for capacity planning.
  • define/cost work content of finished goods and
    services e.g. for charging estimating

17
A Time Study
  • select job identify the work tasks
  • check the method - is it efficient/agreed?
  • start a Time Study sheet break work task into
    "units"
  • several times with a stop watch for a sample of
    workers, time measure
  • completion times for each unit of work in the job
    sequence
  • average for each worker
  • determine apply worker effort rating for each
    worker (BSI scale)
  • Apply fatigue, personal other allowances
  • From the observation data (worker average times)
    calculate standard time for the task
  • Assumes set sequence, routine work cycle (all
    workers), little discretion, 100 effort rating -
    trained/qualified, motivated/committed, working
    at normal pace not fatigued
  • Fix standard time and enter into measured work
    manual/database

18
Example standard time calculation
19
Incentive Schemes
  • What are incentives?
  • Effort-reward relationships
  • Economic orientation motivation
  • Time rates of pay assumptions/requirements
  • Piecework
  • Measured day work
  • Group Schemes
  • Incentive scheme problems
  • Criticism and prevalence
  • cost savings ?
  • economy of operation ?
  • easily understood ?
  • maintain safety standards ?
  • equitable to all ?
  • control and improve effectiveness standards ?
  • common goal ?

20
Process Analysis and BPR
  • Management services business process
    re-engineering
  • how work is done data for planning, staffing
    control functions.
  • applied across a wide range of industrial/commerci
    al activity manufacturing, office, service
    industries, facilities layout, materials
    handling, logistics, IT and IS
  • Identify process components interrelationships
    (inputs, processes/transformations, rules,
    outputs, interfaces
  • break down the process into its logical sub
    processes (work breakdown structure)
  • map using
  • process flow charts etc
  • describe the business process jobs at sub
    process levels
  • document for capacity planning, quality (zero
    defects process orientation, inspection),
    operator intervention, safety, accounting/cost,
    planned maintenance, JIT purposes

Clearly represented in the development and
adoption of on-line computer systems
21
From Work Study to Systems Analysis and Design
22
Analysis, Design, Build Projects
23
System Development Costs
24
Modelling the Information System
Our 'model' of the information system
  • Requirements
  • information processing functions
  • data to store

Input - triggers activities
Output to activities which use the processed
information
Data items
25
Data Flow Modelling (DFDs)
  • Data flows across the system boundary within
    the system
  • Processes (functions that process data)
  • Data stores
  • Sources/sinks (external entities)
  • Functional decomposition (levels
    modularisation)
  • Do not show
  • Time (when things happen sequence)
  • Decisions (see process specification)
  • System boundary
  • Diagrams - better than narrative
  • CASE tools to draw and record details

26
Context DFD - Level 0
27
Level 1 DFD
28
DFDs - Levelling
Consistency of data flows between levels. Are
the diagrams consistent?
29
Logical Data Modelling
  • data captured by the system
  • Analyse the data entities, attributes and
    relationships
  • Entitiesthings (physical or conceptual) of
    interest that the system needs to store
    information about.
  • AttributesThe data items stored in each
    occurrence of an entity
  • Relationshipshow the data in one entity may be
    related (for functional purposes) to another)
  • Create database schema for developers and DB
    managers
  • system processes use the data - jobs,
    calculations, reports
  • maintain the access rules, security and integrity
    of the data

30
Events acting on data
applies
interviewed
final accept/reject
enrols/pays
assessed
graduates
leaves
  • Identify all processes
  • Map against the LDM
  • Data updates
  • Referential integrity validation
  • Menus, screens, reports

31
Example Dabbs plc
  • Customers place sales orders
  • A single order may contain several products
  • Each customer is in one of 500 areas
  • Each customer is serviced by one of 6 depots
  • Each customer is allocated a depot depending on
    their area location
  • All products are stocked at all depots

32
Entity occurrence - 1
  • Entity Footballer
  • Occurrence David Beckham
  • Attributes
  • DOB, height, weight, position, skills, goals
    scored, next of kin, address, salary, contract
    dates, sending-offs, number of international caps
  • Relationships with
  • Games, team sheets, payments, club TV
    appearances, insurance policies, contracts,
    agents, injuries, treatments

33
Entity occurrence - 2
  • Entity Patient
  • Occurrence Chris Woodhead
  • Attributes
  • Name, age, address, NHS number, allergies,
    next-of-kin, medical conditions, treatments,
    private health care
  • Relationships with
  • Treatments, appointments, medical conditions,
    allergies, GP, clinics, medical staff, private
    health payments
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