Summer 20021 Time, Rate, and Productivity Management of Operations Brad C. Meyer.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
February Best Practices in Advancement Services Customer Service: Benchmarking with the Best Jennifer Houlihan Warwick Loyola Marymount University.
Advertisements

Understanding Value Stream Decision Making
Which table represents a function?
12/09/20021 Engineer Training Program Drivers & AP Installation Guide for N34BS3 Written By Suzanne Yu Uniwill Computer Intl Corp Gateway Blvd. Fremont,
Flexible Budgets, Variances, and Management Control: II
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 8 Markups and Markdowns: Perishables and Breakeven Analysis.
Win Big AddingSubtractEven/Odd Rounding Patterns Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Last Chance.
Overview of Full Use Guide on Electric Power Distribution Reliability Indices Panel Session – How to Define Major Events July 22, 2002 Presented.
ASEM-DUO Fellowship Programme Secretariat for ASEM-DUO Fellowship.
Fabio Asnicar Torii Access the Digital Research Community 1 st Open Archives Forum Pisa, May 2002.
Whiteboardmaths.com © 2004 All rights reserved
Splash Screen.
£1 Million £500,000 £250,000 £125,000 £64,000 £32,000 £16,000 £8,000 £4,000 £2,000 £1,000 £500 £300 £200 £100 Welcome.
HRTC Hard Real-time CORBA IST WP3 / K. Nilsson / Viena September 11-13, HRTC Robot Testbed
Year 6/7 mental test 5 second questions
Problem1; Admission Flow
SIGN Cambodia Oct From Urban to Rural Health Care Waste Management in India Srishti Health Care Without Harm India.
Discount, Sales Tax , Tipping , Commission
Auto-Moto Financial Services- The Old Process
1-Jun-14Created by Mr. Lafferty Maths Dept. Hourly Rates / Wages Wages / Hourly Rates Wages & Salaries Weekly / Monthly Wages Annual.
$100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400 $100 $200 $300 $400.
1 Questions to ask yourself Where are your biggest problems? What are your top priorities? What challenges are you facing? Whats most important to you.
KNF Pocket Card Klamath NF Pocket Cards Fire Season 2002.
Operations Management For Competitive Advantage © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2001 C HASE A QUILANO J ACOBS ninth edition 1 Strategic Capacity Management.
Marketing Essentials Section 32.2 Credit
Introduction to Cost Behavior and Cost-Volume Relationships
Shopping & Dining with Proportions
Price Ceilings and Floors. How much rent do you pay per month during the academic year? (Enter DK if you dont know.)
Process Flow Analysis The Little’s Law The main source for preparing these slides is Managing Business Process Flow Anupindi, Chopra, Deshmoukh, Van.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
What is Inflation? Inflation is rising general level of prices
7 - 1 ©2003 Prentice Hall Business Publishing, Cost Accounting 11/e, Horngren/Datar/Foster Flexible Budgets, Variances, and Management Control: I Chapter.
MCQ Chapter 07.
Chapter 11 Strategic Capacity Management
PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Capacity Planning For Products and Services
© BMA Inc All rights reserved. Value Stream Capacity Understanding Value Stream Decision Making.
Capacity and Constraint Management
Chapter 5 Capacity Planning For Products and Services
Inflation Unit Chapter 2 26
CSCI Intelligent Embedded Systems, Spring A Distributed Location System for the Active Office Andy Harter, Andy Hopper.
/ department of mathematics and computer science TU/e technische universiteit eindhoven WISE 2002December 12, RAL: an RDF Algebra Flavius Frasincar.
Welcome to CMPE003 Personal Computers: Hardware and Software Dr. Chane Fullmer Fall 2002 UC Santa Cruz.
Cocoa Butter Crystallisation
March 14, CMPUT680 - Winter 2006 Topic C: Loop Fusion Kit Barton
Tracker Week, January Lab measurements and simulations of hips previously presented APV measurements* assumed signal divided.
Activity-Based Costing and Management Management Accounting: The Cornerstone for Business Decisions Copyright ©2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson.
© 2007 Pearson Education Waiting Lines Supplement C.
Lesson Menu Five-Minute Check (over Lesson 5–7) Main Idea and Vocabulary Key Concept: Percent of Change Example 1:Real-World Example: Find Percent of Change.
Before Between After.
2) Antonio sold 75% of his 400 cookies at the school bake sale. How many cookies did he sell? 1) Rene is planning to spend 15% of her summer with her grandparents,
alternate interior angles alternate exterior angles
Transparency 7 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the answers.
Five-Minute Check (over Lesson 5–9) Main Idea and Vocabulary
A Closer Look at Food Cost
CE80N Introduction to Networks & The Internet Dr. Chane L. Fullmer UCSC Winter 2002.
Number bonds to 10,
Welcome to CMPE003 Personal Computers: Hardware and Software Dr. Chane Fullmer Fall 2002 UC Santa Cruz.
Product Costing in Service and Manufacturing Entities
LONG-RUN, SHORT-RUN AND DIMINISHING RETURNS Chapter 20 Presentation 2.
Cost-Revenue Analysis for Decision Making
ADBIS Navigation Through Query Result Using Concept Order Tomáš Skopal, Václav Snášel, Daniela Ďuráková Department of Computer Science FEI, VŠB-Technical.
European Tax Issues of Mergers & Reorganizations - An Overview - Geerten M.M. Michielse Technical Assistance Advisor to the IMF Georgetown University Law.
January 22, What is a Function?. January 22, What is a Function? Central service agency (CSA) is central to the operation of State government.
Why Businesses Use Markup?
Productivity Improve Productivity, Reduce Costs, Improve Profits.
Why Businesses Use Markup? Why the markup? ◦ Cover businesses operating expenses ◦ Cover Business Taxes ◦ Make a profit.
Process and Capacity Analysis Process Measurement
Presentation transcript:

Summer Time, Rate, and Productivity Management of Operations Brad C. Meyer

Summer Introduction Time, Production Rate, and Productivity are basic measures critical to managing operations. Operations can be considered a transformation process. Throughput items are transformed by processors in activity that takes time.

Summer Time Expressed in duration units: minutes hours days months Activity time is expressed as number of duration units per throughput item.

Summer Why determine activity time? To pay fair wages To know how much to rightfully expect from an employee To promise completion dates to customers To schedule processors and material purchases, to do capacity planning

Summer Example times 5 minutes per customer 10 seconds per part 7 weeks per installation time duration per throughput unit

Summer Rate the reciprocal of time number of throughput units per unit of time duration can be a measure of capacity or of actual output generated

Summer Example rates 12 customers per hour 6 parts per minute 7 installations per year number of throughput units unit of time duration

Summer Question… Suppose a barber can cut a head of hair in 15 minutes. How many customers does he serve per 8 hour day?

Summer And the answer is…. We dont know. All we know is that his capacity is 4 per hour or 32 per day. How many he serves depends on how many come to the shop looking for service. Be careful to distinguish between capacity and actual performance.

Summer Example 1 one customer every 6 minutes – time or rate? This is expressed like a rate: throughput per time, but the number 6 is a time: 6 minutes per customer. Rates should be expressed with a simple unit denominator, like per minute, not per 6 minutes

Summer One customer every six minutes: Time = 6 minutes per customer Rate = customers per minute or change time units to get: Rate = 10 customers per hour

Summer Example 2 A crew can clean 10 apartments in a four-hour morning. Time? Rate?

Summer Example 2 A crew can clean 10 apartments in a four-hour morning. Time? 4 hours / 10 apartments =.40 hours per apartment (or 24 minutes per apartment)

Summer Example 2 A crew can clean 10 apartments in a four-hour morning. Rate? 10 apartments / 4 hours = 2.5 apartments per hour.

Summer Example 2 - extended A crew can clean 10 apartments in a four-hour morning. The crew has 3 people. What is the time and rate per person? Time: 3 people working 4 hours is 12 hours total. 12 hours/ 10 apartments = 1.2 hrs per person per apartment

Summer Example 2 - extended A crew can clean 10 apartments in a four-hour morning. The crew has 3 people. What is the time and rate per person? Rate: 10 apartments per 12 total hours = 10/12 =.833 apartments per person per hour.

Summer Productivity a measure of ability to turn inputs to outputs. output productivity = input

Summer Productivity examples restaurant: customers per labor hour retail: sales per square foot utility plant: kilowatts per ton of coal bank: new loan $ per employee month

Summer Three kinds of productivity labor productivity value-added labor productivity multifactor productivity

Summer labor productivity amount a worker accomplishes units/ hr or $ / hr

Summer Example 128 garments produced in 360 hours 120 without defects, each 8 with defects, $90 each Material cost = $70 per dress labor prod. = 128 garments/360 hrs =.355 garments/hr or labor prod. = (120* *90)/360 hrs = $68.67/hr

Summer Note: this ignores the $70 material cost of the garments. To adjust for this, there is another kind of productivity: value-added productivity…

Summer Value added labor productivity =(ending value – starting value)/hrs such as: (selling price – cost of materials)*units made / hrs

Summer For garment problem: va prod. = [(200-70)*120 + (90-70)*8]/360 = $43.77 / hr

Summer Other assumptions: For value added labor productivity, some subtract overhead (from sales revenue) and some dont. For purposes of this class, I will specify in the problem which costs to subtract and which to ignore.

Summer Multifactor productivity Multifactor productivity = value of outputs/cost of inputs (a ratio, hopefully > 1) value of outputs = price*number of units cost of inputs = labor+material+overhead

Summer Example Making CD players, sell for $300 Quantity made was Labor = $30 per unit Material = $70 per unit Overhead = $50 per unit Multifactor productivity = (300*2000)/(( )*2000) = 2.0

Summer Example continued what percentage increase in productivity would occur with a 25% savings in material cost?.25*70 = $17.5 reduced material cost 70 – 17.5 = 52.5 Mf prod = 300*2000 / ( )*2000 = % change = 100*(new – old)/old = 100*( )/2 =13.2%

Summer Throughput time The term throughput time is commonly used to describe how long a customer or part stays in a system. It includes both processing time and waiting time. It could include transportation and handling time as well.

Summer Example At a dental office, a customer spends 8 minutes on average in the waiting room, 25 minutes in the dentists chair, and 5 minutes with the receptionist, checking in before the appointment and paying after the appointment. What is the throughput time for a customer at the dental office?

Summer Total time = = 38 minutes. Note, in a situation like this, the dentists processing rate would be based on the 25 minutes she spends per customer, not the 38 minutes in total that the customer spends at the office.