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© Wiley 20051 Chapter 1 - Introduction to Operations Management Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 2 nd Edition © Wiley 2005 PowerPoint Presentation by R.B. Clough - UNH
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© Wiley 20052 Introduction to Operations Management Outline What is operations management? Value added, efficiency, and effectiveness The transformation process, measurement, feedback Why do we study operations management? Similarities between manufacturing and services Operations management decisions (Table 1-1) Diagram of the course
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© Wiley 20053 What is Operations Management? The business function responsible for planning, coordinating, and controlling the resources (inputs) needed to make a company’s products (goods and services)
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© Wiley 20054 Typical Organization Chart
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© Wiley 2005 - Effectiveness added by EJR5 Value Added, Efficiency, Effectiveness Value added: value of outputs – cost of inputs Efficiency: performing activities at the lowest possible costs Effectiveness: doing what the company must do to serve customers and compete
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© Wiley 20056 Transformation Process
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© EJR 20067 Measurement and Feedback Measurement systems in operations collect data about the transformation process, the inputs, and the outputs Feedback is the use of data to improve the transformation process and the inputs, thereby improving the outputs. Data from operations measurements systems Cost data from accounting systems Customer information: returned products, complaints, customer surveys, focus groups
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© EJR 20068 Typical Measures Used to Improve Operations Management Costs Quality Quantity produced or number of customers served Timeliness (on-time delivery, service time, fast delivery)
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© Wiley 20059 Why do we study Operations? (1) Companies need a strong operations function to compete. Operations helps attract and retain customers by Introducing new technology that allows the firm to offer new or better goods and services Participating in product design teams Providing the quality and timeliness that customers want Reducing the costs of operations so that products can be sold at a price that customers will pay.
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© Wiley 200510 Why do we study Operations? (2) To learn tasks that professionals do Quality management Project management Job design Scheduling work Increasing productivity
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© Wiley 200511 Similarities between Services and Manufacturers They have transformation processes They use technology They have quality, productivity, & response issues They must forecast demand and try to meet it They have capacity, layout, and location issues They have customers and suppliers (also called vendors) They have scheduling and staffing issues
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MGMT 326 Foundations of Operations Introduction Strategy Quality Assurance Capacity, Facilities, and Work Design Planning & Control Products & Processes
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