Operation and Strategy
Operation and Strategy
Management
Unit 1
Operations and Strategy
• Module administration
• Introduction to operations and processes
• Corporate and operations strategy
• In-class case: McDonald’s drive-thru
2
Module administration
• Module handbook
• Materials on Canvas with some handouts
• Assignment – to be uploaded on Canvas on
• 18 January 2017 by 16:00 GMT
• Class times:
– Tues/Wed/Thurs/Fri: 09:00-18:00
• Need to determine breaks
– Who are class reps?
3
Decision logic chain for operations and processes
4
What are processes?
6
Levels for understanding processes
7
The three levels of analysis
8
Example of the three levels of analysis
Operations and process management analysis for the Programme and Video Division (PVD)
of a national broadcasting company at three levels: the supply network, the operation, and
individual processes
9
Plenary discussion
Consider Caterpillar earth moving equipment.
What services would a company like this require
to properly supply its customers?
Think about maintenance, training, consultancy of
how best to use the equipment, updating,
installation of planning and control systems and
other software, providing finance for purchase,
and so on.
Is the customer buying a product or a
“capability” to do something using the products-
and-services from the company?
http://bit.ly/DrivingRange1
10
11
Products versus services
Relatively few operations produce either purely products or purely services. Most types of
operations produce a mixture of goods and services
12
The Operations Management discipline
Operations management has expanded from treating only the core production processes in
manufacturing organizations to include service organizations, non-core operations processes,
and processes in other functions such as marketing, finance and HRM
13
An example of how processes in the Programme and Video Division (PVD) could be
reorganized around end-to-end business processes that fulfil defined customer needs
14
A typology of operations
15
Four “Vs” analysis for retail banking processes
16
Decision logic chain for operations strategy
17
A firm’s “purpose”…?
Support Activities
Firm Infrastructure
Human Resource Management
Technology Development
Procurement
Marketing
Inbound Outbound
Operations and Service
Logistics Logistics
Sales
Primary Activities
The ‘vocabulary’ of strategy
Grant (2012)
External analysis is the first part of a SWOT analysis
Strategic factors:
- Opportunities
- Threats
The ‘PEST’ analysis
• The firm’s macro- or external environment consists of:
Grant (2012)
Strategic Options in the BCG Matrix
Market
growth rate
Stars Problem Children or ???
Build selectively
Build sales and /or market share Focus on definable niche to achieve
Invest to maintain/increase leadership position dominance
Repel competitive challenges Harvest or Divest the rest
Driving
best in the Link strategy
with operations strategy
industry
STAGE 2
As good as Supporting
Adopt best
competitors practice strategy
53
Top–down and bottom–up strategy influences for
the metrology systems company
54
The product/service life cycle
56
The efficient frontier
If the performance of a group of operations is compared, some will lie on the efficient frontier
57
Operations ‘focus’ & the ‘plant-within-a-plant’
58
In-class case: McDonald’s drive-thru
59