Operations Management Module1
Operations Management Module1
Operations Management Module1
Inputs: Raw materials, Labor, Capital, Time, Technology, Consumers and Energy
A service organization, on the other hand, responds to the requirements of customers and
satisfies their needs through a service delivery process.
Productivity is the ratio of input facilities to the output of goods and services.
Six Sigma: It is a method that provides organizations tools to improve the capability of their
business process. It means 99.9996% out of 100 products of a company will be good with
quality and error free.
Operations is not only confined to production alone. Before and after the production
process the company need to plan and control the flow of operations. E.g. Logistics- Timely
delivery without delay is the output of Logistics.
Tangible output: Manufacturing operations convert inputs like materials, labor etc.
into tangible outputs. They produce tangible goods which are the physical products
that can be seen and stored.
Service operations transform inputs into outputs but output of service firm is
intangible.
Production & Consumption: Manufacturing operations allow separation between
production and consumption.
In Service operation, customers receive service as it is performed. There is
production as well as consumption at the same time.
Productivity: As manufacturing operations produce tangible products, productivity
can be easily measured.
In service operations, productivity is not easily measured as it produces intangible
outputs.
3
Operation Strategy
Strategy is the plan of action to achieve a specific goal. Operations strategy is the process of
making key decisions regarding the operations function of an organization on the basis of
inputs from its overall corporate strategy. The process of formulating an appropriate
operations strategy involves a sequential and structured set of activities. The first step is to
identify the strategic options for sustaining competitive advantage. Once these options
have been identified, the overall corporate strategy can be devised on the basis of firm-
level strengths and weaknesses. The corporate strategy provides the basis for arriving at
the appropriate operations strategy for the organization.
2. identifying order-winning (the attributes that have the potential to motivate the
customer to buy the product) and order-qualifying attributes (set of attributes the
customer expect in the product or service)
4. matching the strategic options with the resources, constraints, values, and objectives of
the organization to arrive at the overall corporate strategy,
5. developing the operations strategy on the basis of the corporate strategy, and;
5
6. using the operations strategy to select appropriate options for configuring an operations
system and establishing relevant measures for operational excellence.
1. Product Design: What to produce and from whom to produce by taking feedback
from the market, customers, competitors, and previous data of the company.
2. Location: Whether the location is transporting feasible
3. Layout: Structure of the production plant and process machinaries. It explains the
arrangement of machinaries for different processes and how the product is being
manufactured.
Three types of Layout:
Product Layout: Machinery is fixed and the product will be moving. The to be
manufactured product travels from one place to another, one process to another
process through conveyer belts. It is usually used in mass production.
Process Layout: No conveyer belts are used. In this kind of layout various processes
are isolated and treated separately. The unfinished pdts are fed as inputs to these
various processes. Final pdt is obtained as an o/p of completion of various
processes.eg car manufacturing.
Fixed Position Layout: All the machinery for the process are made available in a a
particular location where the pdt is being manufactured. i.e. product stays
stationary while workers come to the product site to build it. It is suitable for large
in size pdts which is difficult to move around.eg ship, aircraft manufacturing, etc.
4. Process Design: Different process of manufacturing the final product is designed.
The various inputs, &desired outputs are planned and control parameters are
designed in the process.
5. Human Resource & Job Design: After the process is designed, the no of workers
needed for each process is decided in this stage. Different job description for
different employees is decided. Here employees are their strategy.
6. Inventory: Complete list of finished goods or goods used in production held by a
company. It has 3 categories:
Raw material inventory
Work-in-progress inventory
Finished products
Different inventories are treated separately and they have different processes.
7
Competitive edge- The company has a unique edge to project outside. It can be location,
price, quality, technology, Brand, Vehicles, Customer service. The 3 phase of operation
strategy is Quality, Time and Flexibility.