PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Operations Scheduling
Advertisements

4.3 Priority Sequencing Rules
Production and Operations Management Systems
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Scheduling for Low-volume Operations Chapter 15 Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 2nd Edition © Wiley 2005 PowerPoint Presentation.
Operations Management For Competitive Advantage 1 Operations Scheduling Operations Management For Competitive Advantage Chapter 15.
Operations Scheduling
Scheduling.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Chapter 16 Operations Scheduling.
Operations Scheduling
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
LINEAR PROGRAMMING (LP)
14 – 1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. Operations Planning and Scheduling 14 For Operations Management, 9e by Krajewski/Ritzman/Malhotra.
Practice Problems Problem 1:
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Operations Management, 6E (Heizer & Render) © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Operations.
1-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved 1 Chapter 19 Operations Scheduling.
Scheduling. Production Planning Process Process Planning Strategic Capacity Planning Aggregate Planning Master Production Scheduling Material Requirements.
Scheduling Chapter 19.
Production Scheduling
Short-Term Scheduling
Operations Management
1 By: Prof. Y. Peter Chiu Scheduling ~ HOMEWORK SOLUTION ~
Transparency Masters to accompany Operations Management, 5E (Heizer & Render) 4-20 © 1998 by Prentice Hall, Inc. A Simon & Schuster Company Upper Saddle.
© 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Operations Management Short-Term Scheduling Chapter 15.
Scheduling.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Scheduling.
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e 9-1 © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
15-1Scheduling William J. Stevenson Operations Management 8 th edition.
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
© 2006 Prentice Hall, Inc.15 – 1 Operations Management Chapter 15 – Short-Term Scheduling © 2006 Prentice Hall, Inc. PowerPoint presentation to accompany.
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render - Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
1 1 Slide Short – Term Scheduling Professor Ahmadi.
Scheduling Process and Production Management.
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Scheduling. Scheduling: The allocation of resources over time to accomplish specific tasks. Demand scheduling: A type of scheduling whereby customers.
1 Chapter 10 Scheduling 1 Chapter 10 SCHEDULING McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Homework Assignment Job Shop Scheduling MGMT E Operations and Logistics Operations and Logistics Management Management ACME TOOL & DIE, Inc. Due.
Scheduling for Low-volume Operations
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e 9-1 © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render - Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e 9-1 © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render - Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render - Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
To accompany Quantitative Analysis for Management, 7e by (Render/Stair 4-1 © 2000 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Quantitative Analysis.
Scheduling Seminar exercises Process and Production Management.
Scheduling Operations IDS 605 Spring Data Collection for Scheduling l Jobs l Activities l Employees l Equipment l Facilities Transparency 18.1.
Chapter 16 & 9 Scheduling Work & Employees. Scheduling Outline What needs to be scheduled? –doctor’s office, restaurant, mfg. plant, hospital –employees.
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
1 By: Prof. Y. Peter Chiu POM Chap-8: Scheduling ~ Homework Problems ~
0 Production and Operations Management Norman Gaither Greg Frazier Slides Prepared by John Loucks  1999 South-Western College Publishing.
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
14 – 1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. Operations Planning and Scheduling 14 For Operations Management, 9e by Krajewski/Ritzman/Malhotra.
16 Scheduling (focus on sequencing; FCFS, SPT, EDD pages , and Johnson’s rule pages ) Homework; 6, 7, 11.
Chapter 5 Order Processing
Transparency Masters to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc.,
Operations Management Short-Term Scheduling Chapter 15
Operations Management Aggregate Scheduling Chapter 13
Exponential Smoothing with Trend Adjustment - continued
Short-Term Scheduling
8 Job Sequencing & Operations Scheduling CHAPTER Arranged by
For these two jobs rate each of Hackman and Oldham ´s core job characteristics on a scale from 1 to 10. What is your total score? What about the job could.
Sequencing Sequencing: Determine the order in which jobs at a work center will be processed. Workstation: An area where one person works, usually with.
For these two jobs rate each of Hackman and Oldham ´s core job characteristics on a scale from 1 to 10. What is your total score? What about the job could.
Presentation transcript:

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 1: Assume that Susan is a sorority pledge coordinator with four jobs and only three pledges. The table below gives the expected time for each pledge to do each job. If she wishes to minimize the time taken, to whom should she assign which job? Job 1Job 2Job 3Job 4 Alice4938 Barbara7826 Jennifer3457

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 1: Assume that Susan is a sorority pledge coordinator with four jobs and only three pledges. The table below gives the expected time for each pledge to do each job. If she wishes to minimize the time taken, to whom should she assign which job? Job 1Job 2Job 3Job 4 Alice4938 Barbara7826 Jennifer3457 Dummy0000 The “dummy” must be added because we have four jobs and only three people.

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 1: Assume that Susan is a sorority pledge coordinator with four jobs and only three pledges. The table below gives the expected time for each pledge to do each job. If she wishes to minimize the time taken, to whom should she assign which job? Job 1Job 2Job 3Job 4 Alice0403 Barbara4402 Jennifer0033 Dummy1020 The final table should look like: The set of optimal assignments would then be: Alice - Job 1 Barbara - Job 3 Jennifer - Job 2 Dummy - Job 4 Note that Job 4 does not get done since it is assigned to the “Dummy.”

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 2: A custom furniture shop has the five jobs below to be done and they are unsure how to sequence them through the shop. Compare the effect of the scheduling methods (a) FCFS (first come, first served), (b) EDD (earliest due date), and (c) SPT (smallest processing time). Date Promised JobDays to Finish(in days from today) A25 B88 C612 D410 E14

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 2: A custom furniture shop has the five jobs below to be done and they are unsure how to sequence them through the shop. Compare the effect of the scheduling methods (a) FCFS (first come, first served), (b) EDD (earliest due date), and (c) SPT (smallest processing time). Date Promised JobDays to Finish(in days from today) A25 B88 C612 D410 E14 FCFS SequenceProcess TimeFlow TimeDue DateLateness A2250 B81082 C D E Total Average completion time = 69/5 = 13.8 days Average number of jobs in the system = 69/21 = 3.29 jobs Average lateness = 33/5 = 6.6 days Utilization = 21/69 = 30.4%

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 2: A custom furniture shop has the five jobs below to be done and they are unsure how to sequence them through the shop. Compare the effect of the scheduling methods (a) FCFS (first come, first served), (b) EDD (earliest due date), and (c) SPT (smallest processing time). Date Promised JobDays to Finish(in days from today) A25 B88 C612 D410 E14 EDD SequenceProcess TimeFlow TimeDue DateLateness E1140 A2350 B81183 D C Total Average completion time = 51/5 = 10.2 days Average number of jobs in the system = 51/21 = 2.43 jobs Average lateness = 17/5 = 3.4 days Utilization = 21/51 = 41.2%

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 2: A custom furniture shop has the five jobs below to be done and they are unsure how to sequence them through the shop. Compare the effect of the scheduling methods (a) FCFS (first come, first served), (b) EDD (earliest due date), and (c) SPT (smallest processing time). Date Promised JobDays to Finish(in days from today) A25 B88 C612 D410 E14 SPT SequenceProcess TimeFlow TimeDue DateLateness E1140 A2350 D47100 C B Total Average completion time = 45/5 = 9 days Average number of jobs in the system = 45/21 = 2.14 jobs Average lateness = 14/5 = 2.8 days Utilization = 21/45 = 46.7%

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 3: A firm has the following six jobs waiting to be processed. Develop the appropriate sequencing for these jobs using the Critical Ratio criteria. JobHours to ProcessTime Due #40727 # #30644 # # #

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 3: A firm has the following six jobs waiting to be processed. Develop the appropriate sequencing for these jobs using the Critical Ratio criteria. JobHours to ProcessTime Due #40727 # #30644 # # # Computed Critical Ratio 7/2 = /8 = 2.0 4/4 = /10 = /5 = /12 = 1.5 Critical Ratio SequenceCritical Ratio # # # # # #4073.5

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 U

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 R U

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 RV U

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 RSV U

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 RS T V U

PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render – Principles of Operations Management, 5e, and Operations Management, 7e © 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Practice Problems Problem 4: Our furniture manufacturer has the following five jobs that must go through the two work centers in the table below. What is the appropriate sequence for these jobs? JobHours Required Varnishing (Center 1)Painting (Center 2) R45 S177 T1412 U92 V126 RS T V U