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Operational Management Chapter 1

Operations management involves planning, designing, and overseeing systems that produce goods and services. It transforms inputs like materials, labor, equipment, and capital into outputs like products and services through production and service systems. Key decisions in operations management include facility location and layout, supply chain management, scheduling, quality control, and maintenance. Productivity is a measure of how efficiently a system converts inputs into outputs.

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Aqsa Ali
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
144 views30 pages

Operational Management Chapter 1

Operations management involves planning, designing, and overseeing systems that produce goods and services. It transforms inputs like materials, labor, equipment, and capital into outputs like products and services through production and service systems. Key decisions in operations management include facility location and layout, supply chain management, scheduling, quality control, and maintenance. Productivity is a measure of how efficiently a system converts inputs into outputs.

Uploaded by

Aqsa Ali
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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 What is Operations Management?

 Why Study OM?


 Production vs. Service Organizations.
 Operations Management Decisions.
 Heritage of OM.
 Recent Developments & Challenges.
 Productivity.
 Operations management is the management of
systems that produce goods and provide
services.
 It includes planning, designing and operating
systems to achieve goals of the organization.

 Book definition (not as good): The set of


activities that creates goods and services
by transforming inputs into outputs.

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Inputs Process Outputs
Land,
Labor, Goods
Capital, Production or Service and
Materials, System Services
Equipment,
Management

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Production Service
 Auto factories  Hospitals
(assembly plants)
 Airlines
 Job shops
(printing)  Movie theaters
 Fast food  Grocery stores
restaurants

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 OM is one of three major functions of
any organization (Marketing, Finance,
and Operations).
 We should know how goods and
services are produced.
 OM is such a costly part of an
organization.
 Jobs!

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 Operations.
 Creates product or service.

 Marketing.
◦ Generates demand.

 Finance/Accounting.
 Obtains funds &
tracks money.

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 Tangible product.
 Consistent inputs and
outputs.
 Production separate from
consumption.
 Can be inventoried.
 Low customer interaction.

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 Intangible product.
 Variable inputs and outputs
(people!).
 Production and consumption
at same place and time.
 No inventories.
 High customer interaction.

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Automobile
Installed Carpeting
Fast-food Meal
Restaurant Meal
Auto Repair
Hospital Care
Consulting Service
Counseling

100 75 50 25 0 25 50 75 100
% of Product that is a Good % of Product that is a Service
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11
Marketing Finance/
Operations
Accounting

Manufacturing Production Quality


Purchasing
Control Control

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Marketing Finance/
Operations
Accounting

Flight Ground Facility


Catering
Operations Support Maintenance

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 Product & service design.
 Quality management.
 Process design.
 Capacity & location of facilities.
 Layout of facilities.
 Human resources & Job design.
 Supply-chain management.
 Inventory management.
 Scheduling.
 Maintenance.

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14
 Knowledge of production and service
processes.

 Knowledge of basic OM principles.

 Analytical Tools:
◦ Forecasting
◦ Decision-Making
◦ Linear Programming
◦ Break-even analysis
◦ Inventory control
◦ Waiting lines (queueing)

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15
 Prior to 1700’s - Most products custom-made on a
small scale with local distribution.
 Local craftsmen.
 Products were handmade and unique.

 Industrial Revolution
 Mechanized production and distribution.
 Allowed mass production and wider distribution.
 Fostered division of labor.

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16
 Key developments:
 Steam engine (1769).
 Interchangeable parts (1798).
 Machine tools (1798).

 Results:
 Production increased.
 Prices decreased.
 Workers replaced by machines.
 Need to manage complex production systems.

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 Study production systems scientifically to
improve them (beginning in 1880’s).
 There are ‘scientific laws’ for production
systems that can be used to improve (optimize)
production.
 Work smarter, not harder.

 Management is responsible for productivity.

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 Operations Management.

 Industrial Engineering.

 Social and psychological factors.

 Operations Research/Management Science


(Mathematical modeling).
 Logistics.

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 Born 1765; died 1825.

 Invented cotton ‘gin’.

 Received government contract


to make 10,000 muskets (1798).

 Showed machine tools could


make standardized parts.

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 Information technology: (computers, bar codes,
EDI, internet, wireless, etc.)
 Just-In-Time systems.
 Quality emphasis.
 Service economy.
 Globalization.
 Environmental concerns.
 Security.

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80%
U.S. Employment, % Share

Services

40%

Industry

Farming
0
1850 1900 1950 2000

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Sector % of Jobs
Professional Services 24
Retail & Wholesale 21
Utilities & transportation 7
Other Services (finance, real estate, hospitality, etc.) 21
Agriculture 2
Manufacturing, construction and mining 25

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 Used to measure of process improvement.
 Amount of output relative to input.
Units produced
Productivity =
Inputs used

 Productivity increases improve standard of living.


 From 1889 to 1973, U.S. productivity increased at a 2.5%
annual rate.

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 Amount of output (????) per input (????).
 Output:
◦ Number of meals served?
◦ Number of tables served?
◦ Number of satisfied customers?
 Input:
◦ Lbs. of food?
◦ Number of employees?
◦ Number of tables?

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Units produced
Productivity =
Inputs used
 Output is easy to measure with one product.
 Input may have many components.
 Parts and subassemblies.
 Labor.
 Equipment.
 Knowledge.
 etc.
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Output
Productivity = Labor + material + energy +
capital + miscellaneous

 Use a common measure to combine different


inputs - usually $.

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 Quality of output should be considered.
◦ If you produce more, but of lower quality, does
productivity rise?

 External elements may change


productivity.
◦ Wireless communication may raise productivity.

 Precise units of measure may be lacking.

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Units produced
Productivity =
Inputs used

 What is output?
 How is it measured?

 What is input?
 How is it measured?

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 A builder of new homes?

 An automobile mechanic?

 A hospital?

 A fire department?

 A restaurant?

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