3 Process Selection and Design
3 Process Selection and Design
3 Process Selection and Design
By
Hemant Pundle
Manufacturing Process
Combination of Operations & Activities
(planning, Organizing, control) employed to
create goods & services is known as
Manufacturing Process.
Selection of Manufacturing process is a long-
term decision. Very expensive to make
change later.
System selected must give desired output,
required quality & be cost effective.
Trade off between above. E.g. Doll manufactured
by plastic molding or home-made.
Effect of Volume/ Variety
Project
Jobbing
Batch Production
Mass Production
Process/ Continuous
Project:
Example: Building, Road Construction.
Definite beginning, end date.
Non-uniform requirement of resources.
Fixed position layout.
Scheduling & control most important. (Use
of PERT/CPM).
Characteristics of Manufacturing Systems
Jobbing Production:
Example: Ship building, Aircraft
Manufacture, Tailoring, Bike repair.
Small production run, Discontinuous flow of
material, Long manufacturing cycle time.
General purpose m/cs.
Highly skilled labour.
Highly competent supervisors.
Characteristics of Manufacturing Systems
Batch Production:
Examples: Pharmaceuticals, Paint, Heavy
Vehicles.
Queuing, Large WIP, Short run.
General purpose m/cs.
Skilled labor.
Need to have production planning.
Characteristics of Manufacturing Systems
Mass Production:
Examples: Automobile Conveyor Line,
Plastic molding.
Continuous flow of material, Limited WIP,
Short manufacture cycle time, Mechanized
material handling.
Lesser flexibility.
Special Purpose M/cs (SPM).
Low labour skills.
Characteristics of Manufacturing Systems
Flow Production:
Examples: Cement plant, Refinery, Steel
plant, Electricity generation.
Special purpose plant with built-in controls.
Negligible WIP.
Limited production planning.
Low skill labour.
Process specialist as supervisors.
Characteristics of Processes
Type of Product Specialized Product Machine Labour Variable
Equipment Variety setup
Process Volume Skills cost
Frequency
Job Shop
Batch
Flow
Shop
Characteristics of Processes
Type of Product Specialized Product Machine Labour Variable
Equipment Variety setup
Process Volume Skills cost
Frequency
Continuous
Production
Cost Mass Production
Batch
Production
Job Production
Project
Volume
Service Process Design
Distinctive Characteristics
of Services
Customer participation
Simultaneity
Perishability
Intangibility
Heterogeneity
Customer Participation
The customer is more involved in the
delivery of services than products
Providing services means that you must
pay attention to the service facility
Customers can play an
integral role in the
delivery of the service
Simultaneity
Services are consumed simultaneously
(as they are provided)
There is no inventory
Perishability
A service is a perishable commodity
(can’t be saved)
The full utilization of service capacity is
a management concern
Demand for services is often cyclical
Intangibility
Services are not tangible things
Difficult to patent
Customer relies on reputation since
there is no product to touch
or try out
Heterogeneity
There are variations of service between
customers
Direct customer-employee contact
System Elements -
Structural
Delivery system
Facility design
Location
Capacity planning
System Elements -
Managerial
Service encounter
Quality
Managing capacity and demand
Information
Service Blueprint
A diagram of the service process
showing activities, flows, physical
evidence, and lines of visibility and
interaction
Service Blue Print - Components
1. Customer Actions: Actions actually performed by the customer. This step
assumes huge
importance in self-service sectors.
2. Onstage Actions: Interactions with employees who are actually visible to
the customer.
Separated from the above step using a “line of interaction”.
3. Backstage Actions: Interactions where the customer does not see the
employee serving him.
It is separated from the above step by the “line of visibility”.
4. Support Processes: These are the activities performed by employees who
do not interact
with customers at all. It is separated from the above step by an “internal line of
interaction”.
5. Physical Evidence: These are the tangibles that a customer comes in
contact with and which
influence a customer’s perception of quality of service.
Service Blueprint
Service Blueprint of Airline Travel
Service-System Design Matrix
Exhibit
Exhibit7.6
7.6
Degree of customer/server contact
Buffered Permeable Reactive
High core (none) system (some) system (much) Low
Face-to-face
total
customization
Face-to-face
Sales loose specs Production
Face-to-face
Opportunity Efficiency
tight specs
Phone
Internet & Contact
on-site
Mail contacttechnology
Low High
Moments of Truth
Concept created by Jan Carlzon of
Scandinavian Airways
Critical moments between the
customer and the organization that
determine customer satisfaction
There may be many of these
moments
These are opportunities to gain or
lose business
Unconditional Service
Guarantee
Unconditional
Easy to understand and
communicate
Meaningful
Easy to invoke
Easy to collect
Service Guarantees as Design Drivers