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Chapter 7. Design of Work Systems. Operations Strategy. 7- 2. It is important to make design of work systems a key element of strategy: People are still at the heart of the business Workers = sources of insight and creativity
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Chapter 7 Design of Work Systems
Operations Strategy 7-2 • It is important to make design of work systems a key element of strategy: • People are still at the heart of the business • Workers = sources of insight and creativity • quality of work life and instilling pride and respect among workers matter to org. success
Quality of Work Life • affects not only workers’ overall sense of well-being and contentment, but also their productivity Important aspects of quality of work life: • How a worker gets along with co-workers • Quality of management • Working conditions • Compensation 7-3
Working Conditions Work Time & Work Breaks Illumination Safety Temperature & Humidity Occupational Healthcare Ethical Issues Ventilation Noise & Vibration 7-4
“Ideal” Form of Incentive Plan • Accurate – pref tied to objective measure • Easy to apply - sometimes difficult in sales • Consistent • Easy to understand • Fair
Compensation • It is important for organizations to develop suitable compensation plans for their employees Compensation approaches include • Time-based systems – based on time worked in pay period • Output-based systems – based on delivering results • Incentive systems • Knowledge-based systems 7-7
US Orgs Consider Individual and Group Incentive Plans 7-8 Individual incentive plans Straight piecework – paid only on production • Worker’s pay is a direct linear function of his or her output • US minimum wage legislation has reduced their popularity Base rate + bonus • Worker is guaranteed a base rate, tied to an output standard, that serves as a minimum • A bonus is paid for output above the standard • Group or team based incentive plans • Tend to stress sharing of productivity gains with employees
Knowledge-Based Pay Systems 7-9 • Knowledge-based pay A pay system used by organizations to reward workers who undergo training that increases their skills (education, cwertification, etc.) Three dimensions: • Horizontal skills • Reflect the variety of tasks the worker is capable of performing • Vertical skills • Reflect the managerial skills the worker is capable of • Depth skills • Reflect quality and productivity results
Management Compensation Evolution • Many organizations used to reward managers based on output • New emphasis is being placed on other factors of performance • Customer service • Quality • Executive pay is increasingly being tied to the success of the company or division for which the executive is responsible – can be controversial 7-10
Job Design – A key aspect of operations The act of specifying the contents and methods of jobs • What will be done in a job • Who will do the job • How the job will be done • Where the job will be done • Objectives • Productivity • Safety • Quality of work life 7-11
Job Design • Specialization • Efficiency vs. Behavioral approaches to job design • Motivation • Teams • Ergonomics 7-12
Specialization • Work that concentrates on some aspect of a product or service 7-13
Efficiency vs. Behavioral Job Design • Efficiency School • Emphasizes a systematic, logical approach to job design • A refinement of Frederick Winslow Taylor’s scientific management concepts • Behavioral School • Emphasizes satisfaction of needs and wants of employees 7-14
Behavioral Approaches to Job Design -keeping folks motivated • Job Enlargement • Giving a worker a larger portion of the total task by horizontal loading • Job Rotation • Workers periodically exchange jobs • Job Enrichment • Increasing responsibility for planning and coordination tasks, by vertical loading 7-15
Teams Teams take a variety of forms: • Short-term team - Formed to collaborate on a topic or solve a problem • Long-term teams Self-directed teams • Groups empowered to make certain changes in their work processes 7-16
Teams 7-17 Benefits • Higher quality • Higher productivity • Greater worker satisfaction • Team problems • Some managers feel threatened • Conflicts between team members • Can be poorly led
Ergonomics (human factors) 7-18 Three domains of ergonomics • Physical(repetitive movements, layout, health, safety) • Cognitive (mental workload, decision making, HCI, and work stress) • Organizational (communication, teamwork, work design, and telework)
Methods Analysis 7-19 • Methods Analysis Analyzing how a job gets done • It begins with an analysis of the overall operation • It then moves from general to specific details of the job concentrating on • Workplace arrangement • Movement of workers and/or materials
The Need for Methods Analysis is Prompted by… 7-20 • Changes in tools and equipment • Changes in product design or introduction of new products • Changes in materials and procedures • Government regulations or contractual agreements • Accidents or quality problems
Methods Analysis Procedure • Identify the operation to be studied, and gather relevant data • Discuss the job with the operator and supervisor to get their input • Study and document the present methods • Analyze the job • Propose new methods • Install the new methods • Follow up implementation to assure improvements have been achieved 7-21
Guidelines for Selecting a Job to Study ** 7-22 • Consider jobs that: • Have a high labor content • Are done frequently • Are unsafe, tiring, unpleasant, and/or noisy • Are designated as problems • Quality problems • Processing bottlenecks • etc.
Analyzing the Job: Flow Process Charts • Chart used to examine the overall sequence of an operation by focusing on movements of the operator or flow of materials 7-23
Analyzing the Job: Worker-Machine Chart • Worker machine chart • Chart used to determine portions of a work cycle during which an operator and equipment are busy or idle 7-24
Motion Study 7-26 • Motion study • Systematic study of the human motions used to perform an operation • Motion Study Techniques • Motion study principles– guidelines for designing motion-efficient work procedures • Analysis of therbligs– basic elemental motions into which a job can be broken down • Micromotion study– use of motion pictures and slow motion to study motions that otherwise would be too rapid to analyze • Charts– activity or process charts, simo charts (simultaneous motions)
Work Measurement • Work measurement is concerned with how long it should take to complete a job. • It is not concerned with either job content or how the job is to be completed since these are considered a given when considering work measurement. 7-27
Developing Work Methods In developing work methods that are motion efficient, the analyst attempts to • Eliminate unnecessary motions • Combine activities • Reduce fatigue • Improve the arrangement of the workplace • Improve the design of tools and equipment 7-28
Work Measurement – Book covers many examples • Standard time • The amount of time it should take a qualified worker to complete a specified task, working at a sustainable rate, using given methods, tools and equipment, raw material inputs, and workplace arrangement. • Commonly used work measurement techniques • Stopwatch time study (timed in cycles) • Historical times (based on history at organization) • Predetermined data (published standards) • Work sampling (a technique for estimating the proportion of time that a worker or machine spends on various activities and idle time.) 7-29
Summary of Terms • Efficiency time is cycle time minus percent idle time. • Observed time is simply the average of the recorded times • Normal Time is the observed time adjusted for worker performance. • This adjustment is usually made as a + or – from the average which is 1> Usually done in % • Standard Time for a job is the normal time multiplied by an allowance factor for Breaks/Machine adjustments/Machine repair/ talking to supervisors etc.