Title: Managing Efficiency, Processes
1Managing Efficiency, Processes Productivity
2Work 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)
3Productivity
- 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?
4A 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
5A 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)
6System relationships
Process analysis
Engineer workflows
Design work station information arrangements
Method study
Plant layout
Jobs
Time study
Work breakdowns
Incentive rewards
standard times
7Nature 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
8Opposition 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
9Pioneers 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
10Methods, 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
11Method 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?
12ASME Symbols and Process Charting
Operation
Move
Delay
Store
Inspect/ process
Decision
13Traditional 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
14Other types of process modelling
- multiple activity charts
- string diagrams
- 3-dimensional models
- recording methods - video,etc
- computer-based modeling
15Measuring 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
16Work 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
17A 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
18Example standard time calculation
19Incentive 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 ?
20Process 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
21From Work Study to Systems Analysis and Design
22Analysis, Design, Build Projects
23System Development Costs
24Modelling 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
25Data 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
26Context DFD - Level 0
27Level 1 DFD
28DFDs - Levelling
Consistency of data flows between levels. Are
the diagrams consistent?
29Logical 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
30Events 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
31Example 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
32Entity 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
33Entity 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