Title: Process%20Planning%20and%20Design
1Chapter 3
- Process Planning and Design
2Process Planning and Design
- Chapter 2 identified the critical factors in
providing value to the customer. This chapter
discusses the selection and design of the
transformation process that can deliver those
factorslow cost, high quality, enhanced
functionality, speed, and so onin an efficient
and effective manner.
3Introduction
- Fender's Custom Shop
- Assembly line at IBM's plant in Charlotte, North
Carolina - Rickard Associates, an editorial production
company - Martin Marietta's aerospace electronics
manufacturing facility in Denver, Colorado - Nynex
4Examples
- Examples illustrate several transformation
systems. The Fender Custom Shop is a job shop
that has specialized departments for routing,
lathe operations, inlaying, paint and finishing,
and final assembly. Because work is organized by
the task performed, Rickard Associates is also a
job shop - even though the work is not performed
in one location. Companies like Rickard that
rely on information technology to bring separated
workers together are referred to as virtual
organizations. Martin Marietta converted into
focused factories. And assembly lines like the
one IBM uses are referred to as flow shops.
5Fenders Custom Shop
- Customers include Eric Clapton, John Deacon
(Queen), David Gilmour, Yngwie Malmsteen and
Stevie Ray Vaughn - Production Steps
- computer controlled routers and lathes shape
guitar bodies and necks - also have Neck Duplicator
- necks and bodies hand and machine sanded
6Fenders Custom Shop continued
- detailed inlay work done with Hegner precision
scroll saw - paint and finishing operations in special room
where air is re-circulated 10 times/minute - buffed
- hung up and seasoned for two weeks
- final assembly by actual musicians
7IBMs Charlotte, NC Plant
- Assembly line produces 27 significantly different
products - Products include hand-held bar-code scanners,
portable medical computers, fiber-optic
connectors, and satellite communications devices - Kits of parts delivered to workers
- Computer screen displays assembly instructions
8Rickard Associates
- Produces magazines and marketing materials
- Only two of editorial production companys
employees work at headquarters in NJ - Art director works in AZ
- Editors are located in FL, GA, MI, and D.C.
- Freelancers even more scattered
- Internet and AOL used to coordinate work
9Martin Marietta Aerospace Plant
- Originally set up as job shop with numerous
functional departments - high WIP levels
- long lead times
- long travel distances
- departmental barriers inhibited communication
- Plant subsequently arranged into three focused
factories
10Martin Marietta continued
- Each focused factory completed entire electronic
assembly for particular application - Each focused factory treated as separate business
enterprise - Factory manager assigned to each focused factory
- NFL draft used to select worker teams
11Martin Marietta continued
- Within focused factories part families identified
based on technology and processes - Standard routings identified for each part family
- Improvements
- seven months of consecutive production with no
scrap - 50 reduction in WIP
- 21 reduction in lead times
- 90 reduction in overtime
12Nynex
- Analyzed company in terms of four core processes
- customer operations
- customer support
- customer contact
- customer provisioning
13Nynex continued
- Obtained services of Boston Consulting Group
- Visited 152 companies to document best practices
- Estimated savings are 1.5 to 1.7 billion
14Variety of Transformation Systems
- Fender Custom Shop is job shop
- Rickard Associates is job shop and is also a
virtual organization - Martin Marietta converted from a job shop to
focused factories - IBM uses a flow shop
15Transformation System Design and Layout Analysis
- Transformation system design considers
alternative transformation forms and selects best
one given characteristics of desired outputs. - Layout analysis seeks to maximize the efficiency
or effectiveness of operations.
16Forms of Transformation Systems
17Continuous Process
- Highly standardized products in large volumes
- Often these products have become commodities
- Typically these processes operate 24 hours/day
seven days/week - Objective is to spread fixed cost over as large a
volume as possible
18Continuous Process continued
- Starting and stopping a continuous process can be
prohibitively expensive - Highly automated and specialized equipment used
- Layout follows the processing stages
- Output rate controlled through equipment capacity
and flow mixture rates
19Continuous Process continued
- Low labor requirements
- Often one primary input
- Initial setup of equipment and procedures very
complex
20Forms of Transformation Systems
21Flow Shop
- Similar to continuous process except discrete
product is produced - Heavily automated special purpose equipment
- High volume - low variety
- Both services and products can use flow shop form
of processing
22A Generalized Flow Shop Operation
23Advantages of the Flow Shop
- Low unit cost
- specialized high volume equipment
- bulk purchasing
- lower labor rates
- low in-process inventories
- simplified managerial control
24Disadvantages of Flow Shop
- Variety of output difficult to obtain
- Difficult to change rate of output
- Minor design changes may require substantial
changes to the equipment - Worker boredom and absenteeism
- Work not very challenging
- Vulnerable to equipment breakdowns
25Disadvantages of Flow Shop continued
- Line balanced to slowest element
- Large support staff required
- Planning, design, and installation very complex
task - Difficult to dispose of or modify special purpose
equipment
26Flow Shop Layout
- Objective is to assign tasks to groups
- The work assigned to each group should take about
the same amount of time to complete - Final assembly operations with more labor input
often subdivided easier - Paced versus unpaced lines
27Line Balancing
28Line Balancing Example
29Line Balancing Example continued
- Company operates one shift per day
- Available time per shift is 450 minutes
- Demand is 100 units/day
30Precedence Diagram
B
E
A
C
D
F
G
31Calculations
- cycle time 450/75 6 minutes/part
- NT 20/6 3.33 4 stations
32Task Assignment
33Task Assignment continued
34Line Balancing Solution
Station 3
B
Station 1
E
A
C
Station 2
Station 4
D
F
G
35Efficiency
36Precedence Graph for Credit Applications
37Stations Assignments for Credit Application
38Forms of Transformation Systems
39Job Shop
- High variety - low volume
- Equipment and staff grouped based on function
- Each output processed differently
40A Generalized Job Shop Operation
41Advantages of the Job Shop
- Flexibility to respond to individual demands
- Less expensive general purpose equipment used
- Maintenance and installation of general purpose
equipment easier - General purpose equipment easier to modify and
therefore less susceptible to becoming obsolete
42Advantages of the Job Shop continued
- Dangerous activities can be segregated from other
operations - Higher skilled work leading to pride of
workmanship - Experience and expertise concentrated
- Pace of work not dictated by moving line
- Less vulnerable to equipment breakdowns
43Disadvantages of the Job Shop
- General purpose equipment is slower
- Higher direct labor cost
- High WIP inventories
- High material handling costs
- Management control very difficult
44Directly Specified Closeness Preferences
- A absolutely necessary
- E especially important
- I important
- O ordinary closeness OK
- U unimportant
- X undesirable
45Cost-Volume-Distance Model
46Office Layout
47Forms of Transformation Systems
48The Cell Form
- Combines flexibility of job shop with low costs
and short response times of flow shop - Based on group technology
- First identify part families
- Then form machine cells to produce part families
49Conversion of a Job Shop Layout to a Cellular
Layout
50Organization of Miscellaneous Parts into Families
51Advantages of Cellular Production
- Reduced machine setup times
- increased capacity
- economical to produce in smaller batch sizes
- smaller batch sizes result in less WIP
- less WIP leads to shorter lead times
- shorter lead times increase forecast accuracy and
provide a competitive advantage
52Advantages of Cellular Production continued
- Parts produced in one cell
- Capitalize on benefits of using worker teams
- Minimal cost to move from job shop to cellular
production (e.g. EHC) - Can move from cellular production to mini-plants
53Disadvantages of Cellular Production
- Volumes too low to justify highly efficient high
volume equipment - Vulnerable to equipment breakdowns
- Balancing work across cells
- Does not offer the same high degree of
customization as the job shop
54Cellular Layout
- Teams of workers and equipment to produce
families of outputs - Workers cross-trained
- Nominal cells versus physical cells.
- Remainder cell
- Cell formation methods
- production flow analysis
55Original Machine-Component Matrix
56Reordered Machine-Component Matrix
57Forms of Transformation Systems
58Project Operations
- Large scale
- Finite duration
- Nonrepetitive
- Multiple interdependent activities
- Offers extremely short reaction times
59Selection of the Process
60Volume/Variety Considerations
- High volume indicate automated mass production
- High variety implies use of skilled labor and
general purpose equipment - Make-to-stock versus make-to-order
61Effect of Output Characteristics on
Transformation Systems
62Product/Process Life Cycles
- In RD stage, product made in small volumes
- At peak of life cycle, demand may justify high
volume special purpose equipment - System should evolve as market evolves
- Whether an organization moves with a product
through its life cycle depends on the
organizations focus
63Selection of Transformation System by Stage of
Life Cycle
64Service Processes
- Often implemented with little development or
pretesting - Need to consider amount of customer contact
- Customers may not arrive at smooth and even
increments - Including customer in service process provides
opportunities to improve service
65New Transformational Technologies and
Reengineering
66Information Technology
- World Wide Web
- Federal Express
- Web server set up in late 1994
- By 1996 12,000 customers using service each day
to access package-tracking database - provides higher customer service
- saves FedEx 2 million per year
- Intranets
67Information Technology continued
- Decision support systems
- Artificial intelligence
- Expert systems
68The Office of the Future
- Focus of 1980s was on improving individual
productivity - Focus 1990s is enhancing way teams work together
- Groupware
- communications (e-mail)
- collaboration (access to shared data)
- coordination (jointly accomplishing activities)
69Manufacturing Technologies
- Numerical Control (NC)
- computer numerical control
- direct numerical control
- Robotics
- Flexible Manufacturing Systems (FMS)
70Business Process Design (Reengineering)
71Division of Labor Concept
- Work broken down into its simplest most basic
tasks - Performing same task facilitates attaining
greater skill - No time lost switching to another task
- Workers well positioned to improve tools and
techniques
72Division of Labor Concept continued
- Division of labor concept not challenged until
recently despite dramatic changes in technology - Quality, innovation, service, and value more
important than cost, growth, and control
73Process
- Set of activities that taken together produce a
result of value to the customer - Organizing on basis of processes
- Eliminate delays and errors when work is handed
off - Capture information once and at source
- When people closest to process perform work,
there is little need for management overhead
74Business Process Design (BPD)
- The fundamental rethinking and radical redesign
of business processes to bring about dramatic
improvements in performance - Hammer, M. and Stanton, S. The Reengineering
Revolution, Harper Business, 1995.
75Radical
- Profoundly change the way work performed
- Not concerned with making superficial changes
- Get to root
- Get rid of old
- Reinventing, not improving
76Redesign
- BPD is about designing how work is done
- Smart, capable, well trained, highly motivated
employees mean little if the way work is
performed is poorly designed
77Process
- All organizations perform processes
- Customers not interested in individual activities
but rather overall results - Few of them are organized on the basis of
processes - Thus, processes tend to go unmanaged
- Team approach one way this addressed
78Dramatic
- Quantum leaps in performance, not marginal or
incremental improvements - Breakthroughs in performance
79IBM Credit Example
80IBM Credit Example continued
- Order logged by 1 of 14 people in conference room
- Carted upstairs to credit department
- Information entered into computer to check
borrowers creditworthiness - Results written on piece of paper
81IBM Credit Example continued
- Business practices department modified standard
loan covenant in response to customer requests - Used its own computer system
- Pricer keyed data into PC to determine
appropriate interest rate - Administrator converted to quote letter and
Fedexed to field sales rep.
82IBM Credit Example continued
- Average time to process a request was 6 days
- Could take as long as 2 weeks
- Actual processing time 90 minutes
- Deal Structurer
- Turnaround time 4 hours
- Number of deals processed increased 100 times
with small reduction in head count
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