1 Operations Management
1 Operations Management
1 Operations Management
1
Operations Management
“ Operation Management is the management of activities that
create goods and services through the transformation of
inputs into outputs.”
3
Operations management
• It involves the responsibility of ensuring that business operations
are efficient in terms of using as few resources as needed
and effective in terms of meeting customer requirements.
4
Operations :Construction
The new Boeing 777X will be the world’s largest and most efficient twin-engine jet, unmatched in every aspect of performance. With new breakthroughs in
aerodynamics and engines, the 777X will deliver 10 percent lower fuel use and emissions and 10 percent lower operating costs than the competition.
6
Operations- Supply Chain
7
Operations: Quality, TQM, Six
Sigma
8
Operations : Services
9
The Significance of Operations
Development
The Main Phases
1. Agrarian System
2. Pre Industrial system
3. Indutrial system
4. Service based economy
5. The experience economy
Industrial Revolution
• It Changed the entire system of Operations
• The factory System
• The use of Machines
• The division of Labour
• The standardization of parts and Interchangable
parts.
Historical Development of OM
• Industrial revolution Late 1700s
• Scientific management Early 1900’s
• Human relations movement 1930s to 1960s
• Management science Mid-1900s
• Computer age 1970s
• Just-in-Time Systems (JIT) 1980s
• Total quality management (TQM) 1980’s
• Reengineering 1990s
• Flexibility 1990s
• Time-Based Competition 1990s
• Supply chain Management 1990’s
• Global Competition 1990s
• Environmental Issues 1990s
• Electronic Commerce Late 1990s
• Internet-Cloud Based Systems After 2000 AD
• Artificial Intelligence
• Internet of Things
13
Operations management in
Services
• The operations has the functional
responsibility for producing the services of
an organization and providing them
directly to its customers
• The six types of decisions made by
operations managers in service
organizations are: process, quality,
capacity, scheduling, inventory, service
supply chain, and information technology.
14
Services and Manufacturing
Differences
• There are 5 essential differences in terms
of this :
• Tangible-Intangible
• Perishability
• Heterogeneity
• Simultaneity
• The Customer Involvement
15
Manufacturing vs. Services
16
The Good-Services Continuum
• The products offered are a combination of
Goods and services.
• There is a range from Pure goods To Pure
services.
17
Servitization : It is the concept that any
product can be delivered ‘as a service’.
•It helps in more care for the product and also more customer retention.
18
The latest in Operations
• Artificial Intelligence
• Machine Learning
SUSTAINABILITY
• IoT,IIoT
• Big Data Analytics
• Industry 4.0
Marketing-OM-Finance-HR-should work
together
Operations
Industrial
Engineering Maintenance
Marketing
Finance
Distribution
Public
Operations Relations
Purchasing Personnel
Accounting20
Systems (Holistic) Approach
• Emphasize interrelations among subsystems.
• A systems approach is essential whenever something is being
designed, redesigned, implemented, or improved. It is
important to take into account the impact on all parts of the
system.
• Example: A new feature is added to a product.
– Designer must take into account how customers will view
the change, instructions for using new feature, the cost,
training of workers, production schedule, quality standard,
advertising must be informed about the new feature.
Decisions on Processes
and Infrastructure Build New Factory
• Operational effectiveness means
performing similar activities better than
rivals perform.
Competitive Dimensions
• Cost
• Quality
• Speed
• Dependability
• Flexibility
Dealing with Trade-offs
For
Forexample,
example, ififwe
we
improve
improvecustomer
customer Cost
service
serviceproblem
problemsolving
solving
by
bycross-training
cross-training Flexibility Delivery
personnel
personnel to
todeal
deal with
withaa
wider-range
wider-rangeofof Quality
problems,
problems, they
theymay
may
become
becomeless
lessefficient
efficientat
at
dealing
dealingwith
withcommonly
commonly
occurring
occurringproblems.
problems.
Straddling
• It occurs when a company seeks to match the
benefits of a successful position while
maintaining its existing position.
• It adds new elements to its product or service.
• Occurs when a company seeks to match what a
competitor is doing by just adding new
features, services, or technologies to existing
activities. This often creates problems due to the
compromises that may need to be made.
• Example Continental trying to copy South west
Operations by setting up continental lite. "airline
within an airline"
Order Qualifiers and Winners
2. Managing quality
– How do we define quality?
– Who is responsible for quality?
4. Location strategy
– Where should we put the facility?
– On what criteria should we base the location decision?
The Critical Decisions
5. Layout strategy
– How should we arrange the facility?
– How large must the facility be to meet our plan?
7. Supply-chain management
– Should we make or buy this component?
– Who should be our suppliers and how can we integrate
them into our strategy?
Operations: Manufacturing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJZk9vNS8NE
39