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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 1 Operations Management Supplement 7 – Capacity Planning PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer/Render Principles of Operations Management, 7e Operations Management, 9e
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 2 Capacity The throughput, or the number of units a facility can hold, receive, store, or produce in a period of time Determines fixed costs Determines if demand will be satisfied
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 3 Modify capacity Use capacity Planning Over a Time Horizon Intermediate- range planning SubcontractAdd personnel Add equipmentBuild or use inventory Add shifts Short-range planning Schedule jobs Schedule personnel Allocate machinery * Long-range planning Add facilities Add long lead time equipment * * Limited options exist Figure S7.1
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 4 Design and Effective Capacity Design capacity is the maximum theoretical output of a system Normally expressed as a rate Effective capacity is the capacity a firm expects to achieve given current operating constraints Often lower than design capacity
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 5 Capacity and Strategy Capacity decisions impact all 10 decisions of operations management as well as other functional areas of the organization Capacity decisions must be integrated into the organization’s mission and strategy
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 6 Capacity Considerations Forecast demand accurately Understand the technology and capacity increments Find the optimum operating level (volume) Build for change
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 7 Managing Demand Demand exceeds capacity Curtail demand by raising prices, scheduling longer lead time Long term solution is to increase capacity Capacity exceeds demand Stimulate market Product changes Adjusting to seasonal demands Produce products with complementary demand patterns
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 8 Tactics for Matching Capacity to Demand 1.Making staffing changes 2.Adjusting equipment Purchasing additional machinery Selling or leasing out existing equipment 3.Improving processes to increase throughput 4.Redesigning products to facilitate more throughput 5.Adding process flexibility to meet changing product preferences 6.Closing facilities
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 9 Demand and Capacity Management in the Service Sector Demand management Appointment, reservations Capacity management Full time, temporary, part-time staff
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 10 Profit corridor Loss corridor Break-Even Analysis Total revenue line Total cost line Variable cost Fixed cost Break-even point Total cost = Total revenue – 900 900 – 800 800 – 700 700 – 600 600 – 500 500 – 400 400 – 300 300 – 200 200 – 100 100 – – |||||||||||| 010020030040050060070080090010001100 Cost in dollars Volume (units per period) Figure S7.6
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© 2008 Prentice Hall, Inc.S7 – 11 Decision Trees and Capacity Decision Market unfavorable Market favorable Large plant Market favorable Market unfavorable Medium plant Market favorable Market unfavorable Small plant Do nothing
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