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Learning Objectives Distinguish between capacity strategies

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Presentation on theme: "Learning Objectives Distinguish between capacity strategies"— Presentation transcript:

1 Learning Objectives Distinguish between capacity strategies
Identify and explain economies of scale Compare and contrast the seven manufacturing process structures Compare and contrast service process structures Describe four operations layouts Use break-even analysis for process selection

2 Class 6: Chapter Five Manufacturing and Service Process Structure
Class Six Plan Earlier chapter slides on COB faculty homepage Trimester exam # 1 specs & expectations News of Note Anger is not a strategy (Bloomberg) Lessons of 1984, 1994, and 1996 –Listen t Some thoughts on 14% poverty rate Did the rich get richer? How oir will the poor vote? Stay focus on: jobs, deficits, healthcare and education Only 4% of college graduates are unemployed Kentucky tuna anyone Australian Catholic church bans popular songs from funerals An Overview of Chapter Five

3 Capacity Planning Capacity: the amount of output that can be created by, a process, with a given level of resources over a given time period

4 Economies & Diseconomies of scale
Economies of Scale: as volume increases, unit costs decrease to an optimal level Diseconomies of Scale: unit costs increase as an operation’s size increases Cost per Unit Volume (Number of Units) Diseconomies of Scale Economies of Scale Figure 5-1

5 Capacity Planning Decisions
Time Frame (time required for changes) Limiting Resource Types of Capacity Change Examples Short term (0-6 months) Low-skilled labor Over-time, part-time, temporary labor, layoffs Restaurant wait staff, bank tellers, production line workers Equipment, space Rental, leasing Landscaping equipment, temporary storage Medium term (6-24 months) Specialized labor Hiring, firing, contract labor Engineers, accountants, machine operators, physicians Leasing, subcontracting, equipment installation and renovation Distribution/warehousing, fast-food restaurant rebuild, production line renovation Long term (2+ years) Physical plant New building, outsourcing Automotive plant open or closure, new office building Table 5-1

6 Product-Process Matrix
Project High Variety Flexibility Cost Low Mass Customization Job Shop Batch Repetitive Process Cellular Manufacturing Continuous Process Low Volume High Figure 5-2 5–6

7 Process Structure and Market Orientation
Engineer to Order (ETO): unique, customized products Make to Order (MTO): similar design, customized during production Assemble to Order (ATO): produced from standard components and modules Make to Stock (MTS): goods made and held in inventory in advance of customer orders

8 Service Process Matrix
Low High Service Factory Service Shop Labor Customization/Customer Interaction Low High Mass Service Professional Service Intensity Figure 5-3 5–8

9 Activity Think of an example of each:
Service Factory Service Shop Mass Service Professional Service Think of the last service you purchased: What category was it? What changes can you suggest to move it to another category? What could be the advantages of the changes? 5–9

10 Service Blueprinting Customer actions: all actions done by customers during service delivery Front office: employee actions in the face-to- face encounter Back office: behind the scenes activities Support processes: activities necessary for the service, done by employees without direct customer contact Physical evidence: tangibles the customers see or collect from the organization 5–10

11 Service Blueprinting Figure 5-4 5–11

12 Operations Layout Fixed position: product cannot be moved during production Process layout: groups together similar resources Product layout: resources arranged by regularly occurring sequence of activities 5–12

13 Line Balancing in Product Layouts
Used to assign individual tasks to work areas for a desired output rate Determine precedence relationships Calculate Takt time Determine minimum number of work stations = Total of all task times/takt time Determine efficiency = [sum of all task times/(actual work stations X takt time)] X 100 5–13

14 Line Balancing A B C D E F G Task Predecessors Time (minutes) A
Shape dough None 2 B Add pizza sauce 1 C Add cheese D Add sausage 0.75 E Add pepperoni F Package pizza D, E 1.5 G Label package 0.5 Total Time: 8.75 A B C D E F G 5–14

15 Break Even Analysis Figure 5-4 5–15

16 Manufacturing/Service Process Summary
Strategic capacity decisions include when, where and how much to adjust Economics/Diseconomies of scale affect costs per unit Product-process matrix classifies processes based on volume and variety Service are categorized by customization and labor/capital intensity Services processes can be front or back office Layouts should fit with processes used Process automation affects costs and capabilities 5–16


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