830 likes | 846 Views
Explore the concepts of production and operation management, including objectives like quality, quantity, time, and manufacturing cost. Learn about decision-making, activities, and functions in this vital business discipline.
E N D
Definition • Production :-It implies the creation of goods and services to satisfy the need /wants. • A process of transforming input (raw material ) into output(finished product) may be called as production/Operation management . • The set of interrelated management activities which are involved in manufacturing certain product is called as production management and providing services is called as operations management.
Example of Production-Constructing flats, manufacturing standardized product like cars,bus,Motorcycle ,Television etc. • Example of Operation -Manufacturing units as well as banks,hospitals,educational institutions, Airlines,Consultancy,Police Department.
Production v/s Operation • Production Management is more useful for system where tangible goods are produced, whereas operation management is more useful where various inputs are transformed into intangible services. • Production management precedes operation management in the historical growth of subject.
Input Process Output • • Capital (Transformation) Good & • • Materials Services • • Equipment • • Facilities • • Suppliers • • Labor • • Knowledge • • Time • Information
Objectives of Production Management • The objective of the production management is ‘to produce goods services of right quality and quantity at the right time and right manufacturing cost’. • 1. RIGHT QUALITY • The quality of product is established based upon the customers needs. The right quality is not necessarily best quality. • It is determined by the cost of the product and the technical characteristics as suited to the specific requirements.
Objectives of Production Management • 2. RIGHT QUANTITY • The manufacturing organization should produce the products in right number. • If they are produced in excess of demand the capital will block up in the form of inventory and if the quantity is produced in short of demand, leads to shortage of products. • 3. RIGHT TIME • Timeliness of delivery is one of the important parameter to judge the effectiveness of production • department. • .
Objectives of Production Management • 4. RIGHT MANUFACTURING COST • Manufacturing costs are established before the product is actually manufactured. Hence, all • attempts should be made to produce the products at pre-established cost, so as to reduce the • variation between actual and the standard (pre-established) cost.
Decision Making in Production • Operation manager are required to make a series of decisions in the production function like plan, organize, staff, direct and control activities in the process of converting all the inputs into finished product. • The decision made by operation Manager fall into 3 categories. • Strategic decision • Operating decision • Control decision
Strategic Decision(Planning products,process and facilities) • It is relating to products, process and manufacturing facilities. • These decision are long term significance for the organization. • Area of concern- • Production Process • Production Technology • Product design • Facility Planning and layout • Allocation of resources, Capacity Planning • Facility Location
Operating decision(Planning production to meet demand) • Short term decision. • Production Planning • Inventory policies • Shop floor Planning • Material Management • Quality Assurance
Control decision • Day to Day Planning of- • Production schedules • Production output • Resource require • Maintenance • Tooling • Quality Control
Activitiesof Production Management • Managing operations can be enclosed in a frame of general management function . Operation managers are concerned with planning, organizing, and controlling the activities. • Planning-Activities that establishes a course of action and guide future decision-making is planning. • Operational Strategies • Forecasting and Scheduling systems • Facility Location Planning • Product and Process choices • Layout Planning • Aggregate Planning and Capacity Planning
Organizing Activities-Activities that establishes a structure of tasks and authority. • Job Design • Production Standards • Project Management • Resource Allocation • Structuring
Controlling Activities-Activities that assure the actual performance in accordance with planned performance. • Inventory control • Material Requirement Planning • Manufacturing Process monitoring • Quality control and control feed back
POM with other FUNCTIONAL AREAS • Production and Marketing-The marketing function of an organization aims to provide its products among customers which helps it to obtain substantial sales order. This is communicated to the production which is concerned with the management of physical resources for the production of an item/services. • This means the available facilities need to manage current market requirement and organize its resources(raw material ,equipments , labour and working capital
POM with other FUNCTIONAL AREAS • Production and Finance- the Finance function provides authorization and control to all other subsystems to utilize money more effectively through a well design mechanism. • Production and Human Resource-it is a supporting function which plan and provides manpower to all other sub systems of the organization by proper recruitment and training programmes.It also monitor the performance of the employees for better direction,promotion and results.
FUNCTION OF PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT • Production and operations management concern with the conversion of inputs into outputs, using physical resources, so as to provide the desired utilities to the customer while meeting the other organizational objectives of effectiveness, efficiency and adoptability. • It distinguishes itself from other functions such as personnel, marketing, finance, etc., by its primary concern for ‘conversion by using physical resources.’
Following are the activities which are listed under production and operations management functions: • 1. Location of facilities • 2. Plant layouts and material handling • 3. Product design • 4. Process design • 5. Production and planning control • 6. Quality control • 7. Materials management • 8. Maintenance management.
Location of facilities • Location of facilities for operations is a long-term capacity decision which involves a long about the geographically static factors that affect a business organization. • It is an important strategic level decision-making for an organization. It deals with the questions such as”where our main operations should be based?’
. An improper location of plant may lead to waste of all the investments made in plant and machinery equipments. Hence, location of plant should be based on the company’s expansion plan and policy, diversification plan for the products, changing sources of raw materials and many • other factors. • The purpose of the location study is to find the optimal location that will result in the greatest advantage to the organization
Facility location/Plant location • Plant location or the facilities location problem is an important strategic level decision making for an organisation. • This fact will include the determination of where to place the plant or facility. • The selection of location is a key-decision as large investment is made in building plant and machinery. • The purpose of the location study is to find an optimum location one that will result in the greatest advantage to the organization.
Plant Layout • Plant layout refers to the physicalarrangement of facilities. It is the configuration of departments, work centres and equipment in the conversion process. • The overall objective of the plant layout • is to design a physical arrangement that meets the required output quality and quantity most economically.
Plant Layout • According to James Moore, “Plant layout is a plan of an optimum arrangement of facilities including personnel, operating equipment, storage space, material handling equipments and all other supporting services along with the design of best structure to contain all these facilities”.
Material Handling • ‘Material Handling’ refers to the ‘moving of materials from the store room to the machine and from one machine to the next during the process of manufacture’. It is also defined as the‘art and science of moving, packing and storing of products in any form’. It is a specialised activity for a modern manufacturing concern, with 50 to 75% of the cost of production.
Material handling • Material handling devices increases the output, improves quality, speeds up the deliveries and the cost of production. Hence, material handling is a prime consideration in the designing new plant and several existing plants.
Product design • Product design deals with conversion of ideas into reality. • Every business organization have to design, develop and introduce new products as a survival and growth strategy. • The entire process of need identification to physical manufactures of product involves three functions: marketing, product development, manufacturing.
Product design • Product development translates the needs of customers given by marketing into technical specifications and designing the various features into the product to these specifications.
PROCESS DESIGN • Process design is a macroscopic decision-making of an overall process route for converting the raw material into finished goods. • These decisions encompass the selection of a process, choice of technology, process flow analysis and layout of the facilities. • Hence, the important decisions in process design are to analyse the workflow for converting raw material into finished product and to select the workstation for each included in the workflow.
Production Planning and control • It can be defined as the process of planning the production in advance, setting the exact route of each item, fixing the starting and finishing dates for each item, to give • production orders to shops and to follow up the progress of products according to orders. • The principle of production planning and control lies in the statement ‘First Plan Your Work and then Work on Your Plan’. Main functions of production planning and control includes planning, routing, scheduling, dispatching and follow-up.
QUALITY CONTROL • Quality Control (QC) may be defined as ‘a system that is used to maintain a desired level of quality in a product or service’. It is a systematic control of various factors that affect the quality of the product.. • Quality control can also be defined as ‘that industrial management technique by means of which product of uniform acceptable quality is manufactured’. • It is the entire collection of activities which • ensures that the operation will produce the optimum quality products at minimum cost.
MATERIALS MANAGEMENT • Materials management is that aspect of management function which is primarily concerned with the acquisition, control and use of materials needed and flow of goods and services connected with the production process.
MAINTENANCE MANAGEMENT • In modern industry, equipment and machinery are a very important part of the total productive effort. Therefore, their idleness or downtime becomes are very expensive. Hence, it is very important that the plant machinery should be properly maintained.
Plant Location/Facility Location • Plant location or the facilities location problem is an important strategic level decision making for an organisation. One of the key features of a conversion process (manufacturing system) is the efficiency with which the products (services) are transferred to the customers. • This fact will include the determination of where to place the plant or facility.
The plant location should be based on the company’s expansion plan and policy, diversification plan for the products, changing market conditions, the changing sources of raw materials and many other factors that influence the choice of the location decision. • The purpose of the location study is to find an optimum location one that will result in • the greatest advantage to the organization.
Facility location decision • The Decisions are- • 1) Within the country/outside the country • 2) Selection of the region • 3) Selection of the locality • 4) Selection of the exact site
Decision1-Within the country or outside • First step in plant location whether the facility should be located domestically or internationally. • The choice of particular country depend on such factors like-political stability, export and import quotas, currency and exchange rate
Decision2-Selection of region • 1)Availability of raw material-Factory should be located in place where the supply of raw material is assured at transport cost. • Eg-Sugar Industry ,Paper Industry, Iron and Steel Industry, China Clay Washery and like should be located near the source of raw material. Advantage- • Reduced cost of production • Regular and proper supply of material • Saving in cost of storage of material
2)Nearness to Market-Since goods are produced to sale ,It is essential that the factory should be located near the market. • It is very fruitful step for reduction in cost of transporting finished goods to the market, provide after sales services and execute replacement orders without delay. • Eg-Industries producing bulky Product, pesticides and insecticides manufacturing, distilled water concern ,hosiery units etc
Availability of Power -Power is essential to move the wheel of an industry.Coal ,Electricity, Oil and Natural gas are source of power. • Eg –Where coal is source of power-iron and Steel industry(Jamshedpur in India) • Electricity source of Power –Aluminium Extraction Plant. In this era electricity is significant source of power in cleanliness, flexibility and cheapness.
Transport Facilities -Transport facilities are essential for bringing raw material and men to factory and for carrying the finished product from factory to market. A place which is well connected with rail ,road and water transport is ideal for plant location.
Suitability of Climate- Climate has own importance in area where industries require particular climate condition-humid climate for cotton(Mumbai) and Jute (Colcutta) • In some cases extreme climate conditions adversely affect labour efficiency and such places don’t attract industries. • Therefore small scale industries are found in tropical and polar region and large industries are found in cool and temperate region.
Government Policy -The influence of Govt. policy and laws are apparent in every country. • The Govt. of India has been influencing plant location in number of ways-Licensing Policy, Freight rate policy, institutional finance and Govt. subsidies. • Eg-The establishments of textile units in Rajasthan , Orissa , Assam and Punjab.
Decision3-Selection of Community Selection of particular locality and community in a region is the third step in plant location. • Availability of Labour-An adequacy of labour supply at reasonable wages is very essential for the smooth and successful working of an organization. • Amenities for workers- Beside good working conditions inside the factory employees require certain facilities like-clubs, recreation facilities, parks etc. It can be seen in factories like-Bhilai, Durgapur, Nagpur etc.
3)Existence of competing industries-These types of industries are favourable because- • It help to increase the variety of materials that can be offered by supplier. • The concentration of similar industries at one place improves the labour markets both for employees and employer.
4)Finance and Research facilities-Adequate capital is essential for successful working of an organization. • A place where facilities for raising capital are available attracts new industries .This is particularly true in developing countries. • 5)Availability of Water and fire fighting facilities-Some of the industries require a supply of water for there working like-Fertilizers, Rayon manufacturing, cotton industries.
6)Local taxes and restriction-Local authorities collect charges of supply of water, electricity and other facilities. They also collect taxes from industrial units.