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History of Operations Management Industrial Revolution Scientific Management Human Relations Management Science Quality Revolution Information Age Globalization
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Operations Strategy
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Strategic Importance of Operations Competing on Cost Competing on Quality Competing on Flexibility Competing on Speed
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Competing on Cost Elimination of all waste Improve yield Tighten productivity standards Invest in automation Example: Southwest Airlines
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Competing on Quality Quality in defense: Minimize defect rate Conform to design specifications Opportunity to please the customer Understand attitudes towards and expectations of quality Example: Ritz-Carlton Hotel
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Competing on Flexibility Marketing wants variety for customers Manufacturing wants stability and efficiency of a production system Ability to produce variety of products Introduce new products Modify existing products Respond quickly to customer needs Example: Custom Foot
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Products and Services Make-to-order Made to customer specs Wedding invitations Make-to-stock Made to “standard” customers Books, TVs, apparel Assemble-to-order Standard modules are added to customer spec Computer systems
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Processes and Technology Project Aircraft carrier Batch production printers Mass production automobiles Continuous production gasoline
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Other Areas of Interest Capacity and Facilities Human Resources Quality Sourcing Operating Systems
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Competing on Speed Fast moves Fast adaptations Tight linkages with suppliers Change is embraced and risk-taking encouraged Examples: McDonalds, LensCrafters, FedEX, L.L. Bean shipping, Citicorp mortgages, HP testing equipment, Saks Fith Ave tailor-made suits
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