1 / 17

Chapter 7: Managing Material Flows

Chapter 7: Managing Material Flows. Process Management: Creating Value Along the Supply Chain (1 st edition) Wisner and Stanley. Chapter Outline. Introduction Material Flow Mapping Material Flow Analysis Manufacturing Flexibility Layout Design Material Scheduling

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7: Managing Material Flows

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. Chapter 7: Managing Material Flows Process Management: Creating Value Along the Supply Chain (1st edition) Wisner and Stanley

  2. Chapter Outline • Introduction • Material Flow Mapping • Material Flow Analysis • Manufacturing Flexibility • Layout Design • Material Scheduling • Warehouse Material Flow • Summary

  3. Learning Objectives After completing this chapter, you should be able to: • Understand the concepts of material flow and why these are important to the firm. • Describe the various types of flow analysis and the impact that flow has on the organization. • Describe how the material flow analysis techniques are conducted.

  4. Learning Objectives (cont.) After completing this chapter, you should be able to: • Understand the Theory of Constraints and how it is applied. • Describe how plant layout and material scheduling impacts material flow. • Describe the different types of material flow concerns in warehouses.

  5. Introduction • Different types of flow occur in all organizations (EX): • Buyer initiates purchase order • The order flows to the supplying firm • The supplying firm accepts the order and produces the product or service ordered • Meanwhile the customer waits in a line • Upon completion product or service is delivered to the customer • The customer provides payment to the supplier • This example includes material, customer and work, cash and information flows • Essence of flow management: any non-value-adding element that stops flow is a problem that must be identified and managed or eliminated

  6. Material Flow Mapping • Process mapping: mapping material flows within a process is the first step in managing material flows. • Important for understanding material flows • Process map symbols Start or end of process. A process operation. Work is performed. Delay or storage. Decision. Physical movement or transportation. Information flow.

  7. Material Flow Mapping • Process mapping helps company to • Understand the material flows in a process, • Identify the current sequence of activities making up the process, • Identify and evaluate or eliminate the activities that are not adding value • Improve the remaining process activities

  8. Material Flow Analysis • Material flow analysis for process improvement: when the initial process map is complete, possible to know where inventories are delayed or stored, the paths that inventories follow and the sequence of activities • Then possible to measure travel distances and travel times, time spent in storage and in processing, and time spent waiting on materials and to identify better routes for people, machinery and materials. • Typical process changes might include; • Decreasing process variability through use of automation • Synchronizing capacity with demand by increasing process capacity • Cross-training workers • Using fewer, reliable suppliers • Revising process layouts to reduce material travel time

  9. The Theory of Constraints (TOC) • One of the most successful material flow analysis techniques • Rather than balancing capacities, the flow of product through the system should be balanced • Bottleneck: Any factor that limits system performance and restricts its output.

  10. Customer No 5. Is loan approved? (5 min) 3. Check for credit rating (15 minutes) Yes 1. Check loan documents and put them in order (10 minutes) 2. Categorize loans (20 minutes) 6. Complete paperwork for new loan (10 minutes) Bottleneck 4. Enter loan application data into the system (12 minutes) Where is the Bottleneck?

  11. Machine 1 Machine 2 Machine 3 Machine 4 [70 units/day] [100 units/day] [50 units/day] [75 units/day] Buffer Constraint (Drum) Rope (50 units/day) Material Flow Analysis (cont.) • Drum, buffer, rope (DBR) concept Figure 7.2

  12. Manufacturing Flexibility • One objective of material flow management is increased flexibility to alter production, product design, or delivery schedules. • Flexible manufacturing system (FMS) is a highly automated production system consisting of automated material handling and transferring machines working together under a central computer control system. • Benefits of FMS implementation; • Increased flexibility and product variety • Improved responsiveness • Increased machinery utilization • Productivity improvement • Reduction in manufacturing cost by lowering direct labor cost and minimizing scrap, re-work, and material wastage • Reduction in production lead time permitting manufacturers to respond more quickly to the variability of market demand

  13. Manufacturing Flexibility • Computer integrated manufacturing (CIM): automated version of the manufacturing process where the three major manufacturing functions-product and process design, planning and control and the manufacturing process itself- are replaced by the automated technologies. • Computer numerically controlled (CNC) machines: programmable machines • Everything that an operator would be required to do with conventional machine tools is programmable with CNC machines.

  14. Layout Design • Facility layout significantly impacts material flow • Well-designed layouts reduce non-value-adding movements and the overall distance traveled within the facility • Product-focused layouts • Assembly line • Cellular / group technology layouts: allocates dissimilar machines into cells to work on products that have similar shapes and processing requirements • Process-focused / intermittent process layouts

  15. Warehouse Material Flow • Plant layout impacts material flow • Acts as a buffer between the manufacturer and the customer • Warehouse layout considerations • U-shaped layout: inbound shipments arrive and are unpacked at receiving, where items are either moved to the storage or to the cross-docking process. • Cross-docking: Cross docking means to take a finished good from the manufacturing plant and deliver it directly to the customer with little or no handling in between.  • Cross docking reduces handling and storage of inventory, the step of filling a warehouse with inventory before shipping it out is virtually eliminated

  16. Warehouse Material Flow • Flow-through layout: designed to accommodate a large volume of cross-docking while having some storage capabilities for slow moving items • Modular-flow layout : separate segments are designed for specific warehousing applications

  17. Warehouse Material Flow (cont.) • Warehouse layout considerations (cont.) • Popularity storage methodology • Similarity storage methodology • Size and shape storage methodology

More Related