Lec 02 OM
Lec 02 OM
Lec 02 OM
LEC 02
1
Operations Management
OM is:
The business function responsible for planning,
coordinating, and controlling the resourcesneeded
to produce products and services for a company
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A bicycle factory.
This might be primarily an assembly operation:
buying components such as frames, tires, wheels, gears, and other items from suppliers, and then
assembling bicycles.
The factory also might do some of the fabrication work itself, forming frames, making the gears
and chains, and it might buy mainly raw materials and a few parts and materials such as paint, nuts
and bolts, and tires. Among the key management tasks in either case are scheduling production,
deciding which components to make and which to buy, ordering parts and materials, deciding on
the style of bicycle to produce and how many, purchasing new equipment to replace old or worn out
equipment, maintaining equipment, motivating workers, and ensuring that quality standards are
met.
Obviously, an airline company and a bicycle factory are completely different types of
operations.
One is primarily a service operation, the other a producer of goods. Nonetheless, these
two operations have much in common. Both involve scheduling activities, motivating employees,
ordering and managing supplies, selecting and maintaining equipment, satisfying quality standards,
and—above all—satisfying customers. And in both businesses, the success of the business depends
on short- and long-term planning. The operations function consists of all activities directly related to
producing goods or providing services. Hence, it exists both in manufacturing and assembly
operations, which are goods-oriented, and in areas such as health care, transportation, food
handling, and retailing, which are primarily service-oriented.
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Operations Management is:
A management function
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Typical Organization Chart
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What is the Role of OM?
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OM’s Transformation Process
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OM’s Transformation Role
Add value
Increase product value at each stage of transformation
Value added is the net increase between output product
value and input material value
Provide an efficient transformation
Efficiency – means performing activities well for least
possible cost
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Supply chain of bread
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Goods & Services
Manufacturing Services
Tangible product Intangible product
Product can be Product cannot be
inventoried inventoried
Low customer contact High customer contact
Longer response time Short response time
Capital intensive Labor intensive
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On the other hand…
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Hybrid organizations
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Examples of inputs, transformation, and outputs
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Improving Products
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/con
tent/11_02/b4210048400234.htm?chan=rss_to
pStories_ssi_5
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php
?storyId=89070760
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Improving Services
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyI
d=88196545
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyI
d=7000908
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Improving Services
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyI
d=88196545
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyI
d=7000908
© Wiley 2010
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Improving Both Simultaneously
http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/sep
2009/gb2009099_395466_page_2.htm
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Growth of the Service Sector
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OM Decisions
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OM Decisions
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OM Decisions
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Historical Development of OM
Industrial revolution Late 1700s
Scientific management Early 1900s
Hawthorne Effect 1930s
Human relations movement 1930s-
Management science 1940s-
Computer age 1960s-
Environmental Issues 1970s-
JIT & TQM* 1980s-
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Historical Development con’t
Reengineering 1990-
Global competition 1980-
Flexibility 1990-
Time-Based Competition 1990-
Supply chain Management 1990-
Electronic Commerce 2000-
Outsourcing & flattening of world 2000-
For long-run success, companies must place much importance on their operations
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Today’s OM Environment
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OM Across the Organization
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OM Across the Organization– con’t
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Review of LearningObjectives
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Chapter 1Highlights
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Chapter 1Highlights –con’t
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The End
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