Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Production and Operations Management

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Production and Operations Management"— Presentation transcript:

1 Production and Operations Management
Capacity Planning For Products and Services

2 Learning Objectives Explain the importance of capacity planning.
Discuss ways of defining and measuring capacity. Describe the determinants of effective capacity. Discuss the major considerations related to developing capacity alternatives. Briefly describe approaches that are useful for evaluating capacity alternatives

3 Introduction Capacity is the upper limit or ceiling on the load that an operating unit can handle. Capacity also includes Equipment Space Employee skills The basic questions in capacity handling are: What kind of capacity is needed? How much is needed? When is it needed?

4 Importance of Capacity Decisions
Impacts ability to meet future demands Affects operating costs Major determinant of initial costs Involves long-term commitment Affects competitiveness Affects ease of management Globalization adds complexity Impacts long range planning

5 Defining and Measuring Capacity
Design capacity maximum output rate or service capacity an operation, process, or facility is designed for Effective capacity Design capacity minus allowances such as personal time, maintenance, and scrap Actual output rate of output actually achieved—cannot exceed effective capacity

6 Defining and Measuring Capacity -- Efficiency and Utilization
Actual output Efficiency = Effective capacity Utilization = Design capacity Both measures expressed as percentages

7 Example 1 Design capacity = 50 trucks/day
Effective capacity = 40 trucks/day Actual output = 36 units/day Actual output units/day Efficiency = = = 90% Effective capacity units/ day Utilization = Actual output units/day = = 72% Design capacity units/day

8 Determinants of Effective Capacity
Facilities Product and service factors Process factors Human factors Policy factors Operational factors Supply chain factors External factors

9 Strategy Formulation Capacity strategy for long-term demand
Demand patterns Growth rate and variability Facilities Cost of building and operating Technological changes Rate and direction of technology changes Behavior of competitors Availability of capital and other inputs

10 Strategy Formulation -- Key Decisions of Capacity Planning
Amount of capacity needed Capacity cushion (100% - Utilization) Timing of changes Need to maintain balance Extent of flexibility of facilities Capacity cushion – extra demand intended to offset uncertainty

11 Strategy Formulation -- Steps for Capacity Planning
Estimate future capacity requirements Evaluate existing capacity Identify alternatives Conduct financial analysis Assess key qualitative issues Select one alternative Implement alternative chosen Monitor results

12 Forecasting Capacity Requirements
Long-term vs. short-term capacity needs Long-term relates to overall level of capacity such as facility size, trends, and cycles Short-term relates to variations from seasonal, random, and irregular fluctuations in demand

13 Forecasting Capacity Requirements -- Calculating Processing Requirements (Example 2)
If annual capacity is 2000 hours, then we need three machines to handle the required volume: 5,800 hours/2,000 hours = 2.90 machines

14 Planning Service Capacity
Need to be near customers Capacity and location are closely tied Inability to store services Capacity must be matched with timing of demand Degree of volatility of demand Peak demand periods

15 In-House or Outsourcing  Make or Buy?
Outsource: obtain a good or service from an external provider Available capacity Expertise Quality considerations Nature of demand Cost Risk

16 Developing Capacity Alternatives
Design flexibility into systems Take stage of life cycle into account Take a “big picture” approach to capacity changes Bottleneck operations Prepare to deal with capacity “chunks” Attempt to smooth out capacity requirements Identify the optimal operating level

17 Developing Capacity Alternatives -- Bottleneck Operation
Bottleneck operation: An operation in a sequence of operations whose capacity is lower than that of the other operations Bottleneck Operation Machine #1 Machine #3 Machine #4 10/hr 30/hr Machine #2

18 Developing Capacity Alternatives -- Bottleneck Operation
Operation 1 20/hr. Operation 2 10/hr. Operation 3 15/hr. 10/hr. Maximum output rate limited by bottleneck

19 Developing Capacity Alternatives -- Economies of Scale
If the output rate is less than the optimal level, increasing output rate results in decreasing average unit costs Diseconomies of scale If the output rate is more than the optimal level, increasing the output rate results in increasing average unit costs

20 Developing Capacity Alternatives -- Optimal Rate of Output
Production units have an optimal rate of output for minimal cost. Minimum average cost per unit Average cost per unit Minimum cost Rate of output

21 Developing Capacity Alternatives -- Economies of Scale
Minimum cost & optimal operating rate are functions of size of production unit. Small plant Average cost per unit Medium plant Large plant Output rate

22 Evaluating Alternatives
Cost-volume analysis Break-even point (BEP) Financial analysis Cash flow Present value Decision theory Waiting-line analysis Simulation

23 Cost–Volume Relationships
Amount ($) Q (volume in units) Total cost = VC + FC Total variable cost (VC) Fixed cost (FC)

24 Cost–Volume Relationships
Amount ($) Q (volume in units) Total revenue

25 Cost–Volume Relationships
Amount ($) Q (volume in units) BEP units Profit Total revenue Total cost

26 Break-Even Problem with Step Fixed Costs
FC + VC = TC FC + VC = TC 3 machines FC + VC = TC 2 machines 1 machine Quantity Step fixed costs and variable costs

27 Break-Even Problem with Step Fixed Costs
$ TC BEP 2 3 TR Quantity 1 Multiple break-even points

28 Assumptions of Cost–Volume Analysis
One product is involved Everything produced can be sold Variable cost per unit is the same regardless of volume Fixed costs do not change with volume Revenue per unit is constant with volume Revenue per unit exceeds variable cost per unit

29 Financial Analysis Cash Flow: the difference between cash received from sales and other sources, and cash outflow for labor, material, overhead, and taxes. Present Value: the sum, in current value, of all future cash flows of an investment proposal.

30 Decision Theory Helpful tool for financial comparison of alternatives under conditions of risk or uncertainty Suited to capacity decisions


Download ppt "Production and Operations Management"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google