Title: Information Management and Operations Overview
1Information Management and Operations Overview
2For Next Week
- No Class on Monday MLK Holiday
- For Wednesday, 1/23
- Read
- Pages 1-27 of Business Intelligence Making
Better Decisions - Pages 43-52 of Casino Operations Management
- Pages 1-14 of Harrahs Entertainment Inc.
Available on CULearn in the Additional Readings
Folder - First CULearn On-Line Quiz will cover these
readings Open 730 1130 AM
3Operations
Operations is all about adding value, and
creating wealth.
4Information
In order to know how much wealth you are
creating (or losing), you must collect and
organize relevant information about your
operations.
5Operations 80-90 Hidden
6Transformation Definition
Data
Usable Information
Feedback
7Transformation Definition
- Managers transform inputs into outputs
- Example Accounting Manager
- Inputs data, materials, labor
- Transformation application of accounting
principles and knowledge - Outputs accounting reports, knowledge of
performance, ... - All managers have an operation to run
- Therefore
- All managers are Operations Managers!
8Continuum of Characteristics
Regardless of orientation, information is
required to understand the operations
performance.
9Economic Definition
Operations is responsible for improving
the production function of the
firm. Information is required to understand how
well the organization is performing.
10Bicycle Manufacturing
Huffy
Capital Used (equipment) per unit produced
Serotta
Trek
Labor Used per unit produced
11Bicycle Manufacturing
Desirable
Undesirable!
Capital Used (equipment) per unit produced
Efficient Frontier
Desirable
Desirable
Labor Used per unit produced
12Added-Value Definition
BusinessEnvironment
The Firm
Value Chain
Suppliers
Customers
Competitors
adapted from Porter, Competitive Advantage, Free
Press, 1985
13Added-Value Definition
- Inputs
- Materials
- Labor
- Demand
- Competition
- Ideas
- Technology
- Outputs
- Goods Services
- Products
How?
Marketing and Operations touch the product
Marketing
Operations
14Added-Value Definition
Operations is the fundamental means by which
firmsAdd Value
Information is the way to measure this value.
15How do Firms Add Value?
- Greater Flexibility
- Greater variety
- Customization for customer needs / desires
- Useful Innovation
- Features, technology
- Better performance
- New capabilities
- Often unrecognized
- Greater Productivity
- Lower costs and expenses
- Lower prices for the customer
- Higher Quality
- Better performance
- Greater durability, reliability, aesthetics, ...
- Better Timeliness
- Faster response and turnaround
- On-time delivery, meet promises
16Key Points
Operations is all about adding value for
customers. Without value, there is no business.
17Key Points
Usable information must be captured and organized
in a way that managers can understand how much
value has been added.
18Key Points
Every manager is an operations manager --
responsible for a transformation process
measured in operating terms (productivity,
quality, )