1 / 24

Operations Management, Competitiveness, and Operations Strategy

Operations Management, Competitiveness, and Operations Strategy . Lecture 1. Operations Function. Transformation from inputs to outputs. Inputs Labour Materials Capital. Operations. Outputs Products Services. Operations Function. Interfaces. Personnel. Operations. Purchasing.

craig
Télécharger la présentation

Operations Management, Competitiveness, and Operations Strategy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Operations Management, Competitiveness, and Operations Strategy Lecture 1

  2. Operations Function Transformation from inputs to outputs • Inputs • Labour • Materials • Capital Operations • Outputs • Products • Services

  3. Operations Function Interfaces Personnel Operations Purchasing Marketing Finance

  4. Operations Manager • Manages the transformation process • setup the processes • monitors the process • makes key decisions • develops strategy to manage changes • objective: system runs on its own • Employs bulk of the staff • Great opportunities to cut costs and beat competition

  5. Operations ManagementBody of knowledge to help Operations Managers • Modern history • Taylor, Gantt, Hawthorne studies, Henry Ford • 80’s • realization mass production not flexible • insufficient quality control • 90’s • TQM revolution • Adoption of modern IE techniques • Globalization, • Growth of Service Sector • Increased competition

  6. Increased Globalization • Falling trade barriers and protected markets • More export business • Table 1.3 • Internet and e-commerce • Remaining bottlenecks: • distribution channels and infrastructure • political stability • Downside: regional problems affect all

  7. Increased Service Sector • Overtakes manufacturing • Employs ~80% labour worldwide • 75% of US GDP • Sole source of net employment gain • Same OM techniques being applied

  8. Increased Competitiveness • Defined as • degree to which a nation can, under demanding and rapidly changing market conditions, produce goods and services that meet the test of international markets while simultaneously maintaining or expanding the real incomes of its citizens. • Effect of Globalization • more customers • more competitors • Effect of Service Sector • more eagerness to please • increased customer focus

  9. Competitiveness Measures • GDP • Import/Export Ratio • Output/Input Ratio (Productivity) • Fig 1.8

  10. Trends and Issues in OMOperational Strategies needed to address 1. Industrial Competition 2. Distances 3. Partnership and Alliances 4. Mass Customization 5. Services 6. Quality 7. Flexibility 8. Technology 9. Human Resources concerns 10. Environment

  11. Operational StrategyFormulationMust Determine: 1. Primary task of firm 2. Core competencies 3. Order qualifiers and winners 4. Position of the firm in the marketplace

  12. Primary Task of Firm • Beyond Vision and mission statements • HR tools for aligning staff on common course • Vision statement: general future direction • Mission statement: current state • Exploit current • competencies for customers • internal competencies • Consider new • products and services • competencies • markets

  13. Core Competencies • What are we best at? • What competency beats the competition? • What process (not product) are we good at? • Requires change in focus from What to How

  14. Order Qualifiers and Winners • Order Qualifiers • how do we get the customer’s attention • Order Winners • how do we get the purchase from the customer

  15. Positioning the FirmHow Do We Compete? • Minimize Cost • within quality limits • Maximize Quality (e.g. customer satisfaction) • within cost limits • Maximize Flexibility (e.g. mass customization) • within cost and quality limits • Maximize Speed of Delivery • within cost and quality limits

  16. Operational StrategyMust address decisions related to: 1. Products and services 2. Process and Technology 3. Capacity and Facilities 4. Human Resources 5. Quality 6. Sourcing 7. Operating Systems

  17. Products and Services • Make-to-order vs. • Make-to-stock vs. • Assemble-to-order

  18. Products Projects Batch Production Mass Production Continuous Production Based on Volume Standardization Services Professional Service Service Shop Mass Service Service Factory Based on Labour Intensity Customization Process and Technology

  19. Capacity and Facilities • Demand: All, Average or Given • Granularity: Large or small • Excess: Overtime, extra shift or subcontract • Centralized vs. Distributed • General vs. specialized • Location: labour, market or supply • Globalization: where and how.

  20. Human Resources • Skill levels • Training • Compensation • Incentives • Profit Sharing • Management style • Levels of management

  21. Quality • Targets • Measures • Conformance • Areas of focus

  22. Sourcing • Vertical integration vs.. Outsourcing • Supply management

  23. Operating Systems • IT Support for • customers • workers • management • Planning and Control Systems • Inventory Systems • Training in Decision Analysis

More Related