Title: Production%20and%20Operations%20Management
1Production and Operations Management
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Chapter
2Learning Objectives
Explain the strategic importance of the
production function. Identify and describe the
four main categories of production
processes. Explain the role of technology in the
production process. Identify the factors involved
in a plant location decision.
Explain the major tasks of production and
operations managers and outline the three
activities involved in implementing the
production plan. List the steps in the purchasing
process. Discuss the importance of quality
control.
3Production Operations Management
- Production Use of resources, such as workers and
machinery, to convert materials into finished
goods and services. - Production and Operations Management Oversee the
production process by managing people and
machinery in converting materials and resources
into finished goods and services.
4Production Systems
5Strategic Importance of the Production Function
- A vital function is necessary for generating
money to pay employees, lenders, and
stockholders. - Production is a vital function.
- Effective production and operations management
can - lower a firms costs of production.
- boost the quality of its goods and services.
- allow it to respond dependably to customer
demands. - enable it to renew itself by providing new
products.
6Mass, Flexible, and Customer-Driven Production
- Mass Production a system for manufacturing
products in large quantities through effective
combinations of employees, with specialized
skills, mechanization, and standardization - Flexible Production more cost-effective for
producing smaller batches using information
technology, communication, and cooperation - Customer-Driven Production evaluating customer
demands in order to make the connection between
products manufactured and products bought
7Production Processes
- Analytic production system
- reduces a raw material to its component parts in
order to extract one or more marketable products. - Synthetic production system
- Is the reverse of an analytic system. It combines
a number of raw materials or parts or transforms
raw materials to produce finished products. - Continuous production process
- generates finished products over a lengthy period
of time. - An intermittent production process
- generates products in short production runs,
shutting down machines frequently or changing
their configurations to produce different
products.
8Technology and the Production Process
- Robot- a reprogrammable machine capable of
performing a variety of tasks that require the
repeated manipulation of materials and tools. - Computer-Aided Design allows engineers to design
components as well as entire products on computer
screens faster and with fewer mistakes than they
could achieve working with traditional drafting
systems. - Computer-Aided Manufacturing- computer tools to
analyze CAD output and enable a manufacturer to
analyze the steps that a machine must take to
produce a needed product or part. - Flexible Manufacturing Systems a production
facility that workers can quickly modify to
manufacture different products. - Computer-Integrated Manufacturing production
system in which computers help workers design
products, control machines, handle materials, and
control the production function in an integrated
fashion.
9The Location Decision
10The Job of Production Managers
- Oversee the work of people and machinery to
convert inputs (materials and resources) into
finished goods and services.
11Planning the Production Process
- Choose what goods or services to offer customers.
- Convert original product ideas into final
specifications. - Design the most efficient facilities to produce
those products.
Planning the Production Process
Implementing the Production Plan
Selecting the Most Appropriate Layout
Controlling the Production Process
12Process Layout
- Process layout groups machinery and equipment
according to their functions. - Facilitates production of a variety of
nonstandard items in relatively small batches.
13Product Layout
- Product layout sets up production equipment along
a product-flow line, and the work in process
moves along this line past workstations. - Efficiently produces large numbers of similar
items.
14Fixed-Position Layout
- A fixed-position layout places the product in one
spot, and workers, materials, and equipment come
to it.
15Customer-Oriented Layout
- Customer-oriented layout arranges facilities to
enhance the interactions between customers and a
service.
16Implementing the Production Plan
- Make, Buy, or Lease Decision
- Choosing whether to manufacture a needed product
or component in-house, purchase it from an
outside supplier, or lease it. - Factors in the decision include cost,
availability of reliable outside suppliers,
duration of the firms supply needs, and the need
for confidentiality. - Selection of Suppliers
- Based on comparison of quality, prices,
dependability of delivery, and services offered
by competing companies. -
17Inventory Control
- Inventory Control
- function requiring production and operations
managers to balance the need to keep stock on
hand to meet demand against the costs of carrying
inventory - Perpetual inventory
- Vendor-managed inventory
- Just-in-Time Systems
- broad management philosophy that reaches beyond
the narrow activity of inventory control to
influence the entire system of production and
operations management. - Materials Requirement Planning
- computer-based production planning system that
lets a firm ensure that it has all the parts and
materials it needs to produce its output at the
right time and place and in the right amounts.
18Controlling the Production Process
- Production control creates a well-defined set of
procedures for coordinating people, materials,
and machinery to provide maximum production
efficiency. - 1. Planning
- 2. Routing
- 3. Scheduling
- 4. Dispatching
- 5. Follow-up
19Gantt Chart
20PERT Diagram
21Importance of Quality
- A good or service free of deficiencies.
- Poor quality can account for 20 loss in revenue.
- Benchmarking is the process of analyzing other
firms best practices. - Quality control is measuring goods and services
against established quality standards. - Many companies evaluate quality using the Six
Sigma concept. - A company tries to make error-free products
99.9997 of the time, a tiny 3.4 errors per
million opportunities.
22ISO Standards
- International Organization for Standardization
(ISO)- mission is to promote the development of
standardized products to facilitate trade and
cooperation across national borders. - Representatives from more than 146 nations.
- ISO 9000 series of standards sets requirements
for quality processes. - Nearly half a million ISO 9000 certificates have
been awarded to companies around the world. - ISO 14000 series also sets standards for
operations that minimize harm to the environment.
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