BUSN 6110 Class 1 - supply chain research
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Transcript BUSN 6110 Class 1 - supply chain research
Operations Management
BUSN 6110
FA1 2013
Syllabus
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Class 1 (Aug 21): chap 1; chap 2, case study (Introduction, Strategy,
Decision Making)
Class 2: (Aug 28):Chap 9/10, Chap 6 (Supply Chain, Quality)
Class 3: (Sep 4): Chap 4 , Supplemental readings (Product and Service
Design, Processes and Technologies)
Class 4: (Sep 11): Case Study, The Beer Game, Mid Term Exam
Class 5: (Sep 18):Chap 7, Chap 13 (Facility Planning ,Project Management,
Capacity and Aggregate Planning)
Class 6: (Sep 25): Chap 11 (Inventory Management , Forecasting)
Class 7: (Oct 2): Supplemental Readings (Reverse Logistics – need “The
Forklifts Have Nothing To Do!” Available in the Lewis and Clark Bookstore)
Chap 10 (Lean/Just in Time/TOC)
Class 8: (Oct 9) Supply Chain Security, Topics in Supply Chain
Management, Review for Final Exam, Case Study Review
Class 8: (Oct 16) End of Course Critique, Final Exam
Additional Text
The # 20 Selling
Warehousing
and Distribution Book
and #1Non-text book
Warehousing Book
Book on May 23, 2013
Grades
• Attendance/Participation– 20%
• Mid Term – 40%
• Final Exam – 40%
Contact Information
• [email protected]
• (760) 447-3651
• Personal background
Class Slides and
Information
• www.supplychainresearch.com
• Slides will be posted/updated week
prior to class – therefore the slides
currently on the website may change
as new materials come available
Chapter 1
Introduction to
Operations
Management
The Operations
Function
Operations as a transformation
process
Operations as a
basic function
Operations as the
technical core
Operations as a
Transformation Process
INPUT
Material
Machines
Labor
Management
Capital
Operations as a
Transformation Process
INPUT
Material
Machines
Labor
Management
Capital
TRANSFORMATION
PROCESS
Operations as a
Transformation Process
INPUT
Material
Machines
Labor
Management
Capital
TRANSFORMATION
PROCESS
OUTPUT
Goods
Services
Operations as a
Transformation Process
INPUT
Material
Machines
Labor
Management
Capital
TRANSFORMATION
PROCESS
Feedback
OUTPUT
Goods
Services
Transformation
Processes
Physical
Locational
(manufacturing)
(transportation/
warehouse)
Exchange
(retail)
Physiological (health care)
Psychological (entertainment)
Informational (communications)
Impacts on Operations
Management
Industrial Revolution
Scientific Management
Human Relations or the lack thereof
Advent of Management Science
Quality Emphasis
Globalization of Supply Chains
Information Age/Internet Revolution
Key Events
Industrial Revolution
Steam engine
1769 James Watt
Division of labor
1776 Adam Smith
Interchangeable parts 1790 Eli Whitney
Scientific Management
Principles
Frederick W. Taylor 1911
Activity scheduling chart Henry Gantt 1912
Moving assembly line Henry Ford 1913
Key Events
Human Relations
Hawthorne studies
Motivation theories
1930
1940s
1950s
1960s
Elton Mayo
Abraham Maslow
Frederick Hertzberg
Douglas McGregor
Management Science
Linear programming
Digital computer
Simulation, PERT/CPM,
Waiting line theory
MRP
1947 George Dantzig
1951 Remington Rand
1950s Operations research
groups
1960s Joseph Orlicky, IBM
Key Events
Quality Emphasis
JIT
TQM
1970s Taiichi Ohno, Toyota
1980s W. Edwards Deming,
Joseph Juran, et. al.
Strategy and operations
Skinner, Hayes
Reengineering
1990s Hammer, Champy
World Trade Organization 1990s Numerous countries
and companies
Globalization
European Union and
other trade agreements
EDI, EFT, CIM
1970s IBM and others
1980s
Key Events
Information Age/
Internet Revolution
Internet, WWW, ERP
Supply chain
management,
E-commerce
1990s
SAP, i2
Technologies, ORACLE,
PeopleSoft, Amazon,
Yahoo, eBay,
and others
Categories of
E-Commerce
Business
Consumer
Business
B2B
Commerceone.com
B2C
Amazon.com
Consumer
C2B
Priceline.com
C2C
eBay.com
Types of B2B Transactions
Buyers
Buyer
Seller
(a) Electronic Storefront
Sellers
Sellers
(b) Seller’s Auction
Buyers
Sellers
Buyer
(c) Buyer’s Auction
(d) Exchange or E-Marketplace
In Theory:
E-Business Promotes:
Better customer relations
More efficient processes
Lower cost of materials
Information technology synergy
Better and faster decision making
E-Business Promotes:
New forms of organizations
Expanded supply chain
Higher customer expectations
New ways of doing business
Globalization
Competitiveness
The degree to which a nation can
produce goods and services that
meet the test of international
markets while simultaneously
maintaining or expanding the real
incomes of its citizens.
Measures of
Competitiveness
Productivity
GDP (Gross domestic product) growth
Market capitalization
Technological infrastructure
Quality of education
Efficiency of government
Productivity
Output
Productivity =
Input
Productivity improves when firms:
Become more efficient
Downsize
Expand
Retrench
Achieve breakthroughs
Barriers to Entry
Economies of scale
Capital investment
Access to supply and distribution
channels
Learning curves
Competition Within
Industries Increases When
Firms are relatively equal in size
and resources
Products and services are
standardized
Industry growth is slow or
exponential
Chapter 2
Operations
Strategy
The Importance of Clearly
Stated Missions/Visions
“one who is confused in purpose
cannot respond to his enemy” Sun
Tzu, The Art of War
• To know the purpose – there must be a
clearly stated mission and vision.
Vision, Mission,
Strategy
• Mission Statement
• Vision
• Strategy
Clearly Stated Mission???
“When you come to a fork in the
road, take it.”
Example of A Clearly
Understood Mission
COL Rusling on General Grant:
“He made certain his
subordinates knew exactly what
he wanted, and why and when he
wanted it.”
Example of A Clearly
Understood Mission
“We endeavor to go to the moon and
return safely before the end of this
decade.”
- John F. Kennedy
Strategy Formulation
• Define a primary task
• Assess core
competencies
• Determine order
winners & order qualifiers
• Positioning the firm
Internal and External
Analysis
• SWOT Analysis
– Strengths
– Weaknesses
– Opportunities
– Threats
STEEPLE Analysis
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Society
Technology
Economic
Environment
Political
Legal
Ethics
STEEPLE and PMESII-PT
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Social
Technological
Environmental
Economic
Political
Legal
Ethical
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Political
Military
Economic
Social
Information
Infrastructure
Physical environment
Time
© 2011, Joe Walden
Core Competencies
• Also known as core capabilities
• Skills that differentiate the service or
manufacturing firm from competitors
• Those things that the company does
best
Strategy Formulation
• Define a primary task
• Assess core
competencies
• Determine order
winners & order qualifiers
• Positioning the firm
Competing on Cost
Eliminate all waste
Invest in
Updated facilities & equipment
Streamlining operations
Training & development
Competitive
Priorities: Cost
• Southwest Airlines
– one type of airplane facilitates crew
changes, record-keeping, maintenance,
and inventory costs
– direct flights mean no baggage
transfers
– $30 million annual savings in travel
agent commissions by requiring
customers to contact the airline directly
Copyright, 2006, John Wiley and Sons
Competing on Quality
Please the customer
Understand customer
attitudes toward and
expectations of
quality
Example: Ritz Carlton
Competing on
Flexibility
Produce wide variety of
products
Introduce new products
Modify existing
products quickly
Respond to
customer needs
Competing on Speed
Fast moves
Fast adaptations
Tight linkages
Example: FEDEX, UPS
Operations Role in
Corporate Strategy
Provide support for overall
strategy of a firm
Serve as firm’s distinctive
competence
Must be consistent
Must be consistent with overall
strategy
Operations and Wall
Street
• Comparing operations at a firm with
competitors
• Example
income per employee
revenue per employee
inventory turnover
customer turnover
Operations
Strategy at
Wal-Mart
Mission
Wal-Mart
Provide value for our customers
Competitive
Priority
Low prices, everyday
Operations
Strategy
Low inventory levels
Short flow times
Operations
Structure
Linked communications
between stores
Fast transportation
system
Enabling Process
and Technologies
EDI/satellites
Cross-docking
Focused
locations
Strategy and the
Internet
Create a distinctive business
strategy
Strengthen existing competitive
advantages
Integrate new and traditional
activities
Must provide a unique value to the
customer- Zappos/Amazon
Products & Services
Make-to-order
Made to customer specifications
after order received
Make-to-stock
Made in anticipation of demand
Assemble-to-order
Add options according to
customer specification
Processes & Technology
Project
One-time production of product to
customer order
Batch production
Process many jobs at same time in batch
Mass production
Produce large volumes of standard
product for mass market
Continuous production
Very high volume commodity product
Decisions in
Operations
Capacity & Facilities
How much capacity to provide
Size of capacity changes
Handling excess demand
Hiring/firing
workers
Need for new
facilities
Facilities
Best size for facility?
Large or small facilities
Facility focus
Facility location
Global facility
Human Resources
Skill levels required
Degree of autonomy
Policies
Profit sharing
Individual or team work
Supervision methods
Levels of management
Training
Quality
Target level
Measurement
Employee involvement
Training
Systems needed to ensure quality
Maintaining quality awareness
Evaluating quality efforts
Determining customer perceptions
Sourcing
Degree of vertical integration
Supplier selection
Supplier relationship
Supplier quality
Supplier cooperation
Operating Systems
Execute strategy daily
Information technology support
Effective planning & control systems
Alignment of inventory levels,
scheduling priorities, & reward
systems
Policy Deployment
Focuses employees on common
goals & priorities
Translates strategy into
measurable objectives
Aligns day-to-day decisions with
strategic plan
Balanced Scorecard
Finance — How should we look to our
shareholders?
Customer — How should we look to our
customers?
Processes — At which business
processes must we excel?
Learning and Growing — How will we
sustain our ability to change and
improve?
Issues and Trends
Global markets,
sourcing,
operations
Virtual companies
Greater choice
Emphasis on
service
Speed and
flexibility
Supply chains
Collaboration
Technological
advances
Knowledge
Environment
and social
responsibilities
The Dilbert (Dogbert) Solution –
Change the Name of the Old Program
Homework
• case study