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Published byFlorence Pitts Modified over 9 years ago
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Operations Management Dr. Ron Lembke
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Price / Quality / Speed? Decoupling Point Make to Stock – ready on the shelf – Breyer’s Assemble to Order – parts waiting for an order – DQ Make to Order – Raw Materials waiting – Cold Stone Engineer to Order – Anything you want – Home made DesignProduceAssembleDeliver MTS ATO MTO ETO
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Assume things are in “steady state,” not startup Production level = average demand Inventory = Throughput rate * Flow Time Flow Time = Inv / Throughput rate TH rate = Inv / Flow Time Single workstation, a line, or whole supply chain Flow Time = 15 days Inv = 5/day * 15 days = 75 units WIP TH = 5 units/day TH Rate = 100 units/ hr Inv = 24 units Flow Time = 24 /100 = 0.24 hrs
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Variety Low Medium High Volume LowMediumHigh Process Focus (job shops) Repetitive (cars, motorcycles) Product Focus (steel, glass)
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Low volume, high variety, “do it all” “Job shop” environment (e.g. Kinko’s) High amount of flexibility Each job is different Relatively high cost per unit Very high flexibility
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Products tend to move through the four stages over life cycle. Unit costs decrease as standardization increases, and production increases. Flexibility decreases as volume, standardization increase
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Variety Low Medium High Volume LowMediumHigh project Manufacturing Cell Workcenter Assembly Line Continuous Process
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Job Shop - low standardization, every order is a different product, new design Batch Shop - Stable line of products, produced in batches Assembly Line - Discrete parts moving from workstation to workstation Continuous Flow - Undifferentiated flow of product (beer, paper, etc.)
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Production Process selection very important Strategic considerations – decoupling Volume / Variety tradeoffs Maturation of processes over life cycle Little’s Law: FT = TH * INV
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