- OM allows businesses to be deliberate about how goods or services are produced, ie business operations. This involves systematically learning the organizational goals, how people are organized within the organization, how products and services are produced, to deeply understand the costs associated with the production process. (Operations are very costly for businesses).
- Example: this systematic approach prevents the reliance on potential misconceptions like the notion that more work hours and or having more workers are necessarily more productive.
- OM answers questions like the following.
- What products should be produced? What design should be applied? (Product Management). Example(s):
- Standardized parts in manufacturing, even if using the mass customization model and then seeking cheaper prices from input suppliers to achieve scale economies with large orders.
- Should the business produce their product entirely or at all? What is required? If the business buys, from whom? (Supply Chain Management)
- In an attempt to shorten the leadtime (especially since their raw materials and food products do not have a very extended shelf life), they own several activities within the supply chain like potato farms, controlling a fleet of trucks for transporting raw materials, warehousing, distribution and delivery trucks.
- How much stock should you maintain? When should you re-order? (Inventory Management)
- FritoLay raw materials like oil, potatos, corn and seeds do not have a very extended shelf life. Consequently, 'holding costs' (ie the cost of holding inventory) are great (because of potential loss). In response, FritoLay mitigated that risk. They opened production facilities near to raw materials and consumers. This reduces the time needed for the product to remain on the shelf. Additionally, to produce the product, there is only one efficiency-oriented assembly line that lasts an average of only a few hours. After that point, their internal storage for each batch is only 2.5 days worth of products.
- What are the short- and long-term schedules (Forecasting & Production Capacity Planning)
- FritoLay base forecasts on historical sales, new product introductions,production innovations and promotions and dynamic local (tentpole-motivated) demand forecasts.
- What are your needs in materials, personnel, overheads, etc? (Operations scheduling)
- Caste study: Colins Title Company (below) illustrates factor analyses regarding the possible introduction of new overheads to improve outputs
- Fritolay reduces staff turnover with several measures like competitive wages and paid uniforms among other things.
- Which quality should be used? (Quality Management)
- How should the facilty be used in production? How should the space be arranged? (Facility Management)
- Case study: McDonald's revolutionized their production to ensure positive customer experience that delivered on expectation for fast food; food that took 30 minutes and not 3 hours.
- Presentations to explain how and why the organization functions: Business plan
OLD System
|
Outputs |
. Workers: 4 . Work hours / day: 8 . Total Wages: $640 . Overheads: $400 |
8 units daily |
|
Outputs |
. Workers: 4 . Work hours / day: 8 . Total Wages: $640 . Overheads: $800 |
14 units daily |
OLD
system |
NEW system |
productivity = 8
units / 32 work hours = 0.25
units per work hour |
productivity = 14
units / 32 work hours = 0.43 units per work hour |
0.19 units / 0.25 = 75%
Using the same situation, the practitioner is interested in productivity regarding expenditure (and no longer work hours). Furthermore, the practitioner combines multiple costs because they have a standardized measurement, dollars.
OLD
system |
NEW system |
productivity = output
/ (wages + overheads) costs = 8
units / ($640 + $400) = 0.0077 per dollar spent |
productivity = output
/ (wages + overheads) costs = 14 units / ($640 + $800) = 0.0097 units per dollar spent Productivity analysis +26%, more outputs |
Productivity Analysis for Decision-making: Switch to the new system?
Here is an efficient format for presenting the results.
Productivity Analysis |
|||
|
OLD system: Without new
overheads |
NEW system: With new
overheads |
%
change (+
increase, - decrease) |
Units per day |
8 |
14 |
+75% in units |
Overheads
per day |
$1,040 |
$1,440 |
+38% units per overheads |
Labor productivity |
0.25 units per hour |
0.44 units per hour |
+75% units per
labor productivity |
Multi-factor
productivity |
0.0077
unts per dollar |
0. 0097
unts per dollar |
+26% units per costs (labor, overheads) |
The multi-factor analysis is likely more trustwothy because, as seen in this case, the results can be more sobering with lower overall percentage changes. However, whether multi-factor analyses are more appropriate depend on your business circumstances.
- detail oriented and analytical, especially quantitative (regarding issues that include input costs, processing costs, inventory costs, quality management costs, scale economies and so on)
- people skills that can be used to influence change
- tech-savviness and willingness to learn new technology
- can keep in mind and honor the goal of delivering customer value.
- Business plan
- Breakeven analysis
- Demand. Understanding consumer demand can help you plan the appropriate level of inventories (not too much that can become costly or too little that you can not meet growing demand.)
- Managerial accounting
- Strengths and weaknesses of your business' distribution channels
- Throughput refers to the amount of inputs or outputs passing through the 'transformation' system or process.
- A management system refers to the set of policies, processes and procedures used to fulfill required tasks. As shown in the case studies above, old and new scenarios are referred to as the old and new 'systems'.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.