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International Operations Management. MGMT 6367 Lecture 06 Instructor: Yan Qin Fall 2012. Outline. Review for Mid-term Exam Case study Case: New Balance Case : Xbox Case : Mattel. Review for Mid-term Exam. Additional office hours: 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm, Oct 11 CST
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International Operations Management MGMT 6367 Lecture 06 Instructor: Yan Qin Fall 2012
Outline • Review for Mid-term Exam • Case study • Case: New Balance • Case: Xbox • Case: Mattel
Review for Mid-term Exam • Additional office hours: • 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm, Oct 11 CST • 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm, Oct 13 CST • Mid-term Exam: 2 hours, open book/slides, in class • OnlyMultiple-choice questions will be given on the exam. • There will be 30 multiple-choice questions on the exam. Each is worth 4 points. • Anything that is not listed on the review slides will not be tested. • No case-related questionswill be asked on the exam.
What you should know – Week 1 • Definitions of Production, Operations, and Operations Management • Four competitive priorities • Definitions of qualifying/winning criteria • What is Logistics • Global Vs. Domestic Operations and Logistics • Differences between goods and services
What you should know – Week 3 • Definitions of Outsourcing, Off-shoring, Back-sourcing, and Near-shoring • Why outsourcing • Four types of components classified based on the SIC matrix • Outsource/in-house recommendations for each type of component • What are the 5 typical buyer-supplier relationships • Pros and Cons of each type of relationship • Products suitable for global outsourcing • Risks of outsourcing
What you should know – Week 3 • Calculation: You should know how to • Use the method of Factor Rating to find the supplier with the highest/lowest overall rating; • Solve for the break-even quantity • Give make-or-buy suggestions based on the relative magnitude of break-even quantity and the expected production quantity
What you should know – Week 4 • Definitions of Supply Chain Management • What is Bull-whip effect? • Major causes and possible remedies • What is risk? • Four types of risks in a Supply Chain • Possible risk management strategies • Common types of qualitative and quantitative forecasting methods
What you should know – Week 4 • Calculation: You should know how to • Compute Inventory Turnover and Weeks of Supply based on the information given. • Compute the significance of a risk event • Use moving average methods and exponential smoothing method to make required forecasts
What you should know – Week 5 • Definitions of customer value, value-added activities, non-value-added activities, and waste • Ohno’s seven wastes • Expectations in a Lean Supply Chain • What is Group Technology • Benefits offered by the use of Group Technology • Pros and Cons of small transfer batches • Definition of setup time • Differences between internal and external setup steps
What you should know – Week 6 • Key in storage design • Common types of storage systems • Inputs to the layout decision for production facilities • Four basic production layouts • Description of each layout • Suitable products for each layout • Calculation: You should know how to • Compute the material handling costs for a process layout. Pay attention to the example given on Process Layout Design; • Compute the required workstation cycle time, the theoretical minimum number of workstations, and efficiency in assembly-line balancing.
Case study • Sample answers to the case-related questions can be found in the PDF document titled “Case Study – Sample Answers” posted on the course website. • Please note that the sample answers may not be 100% correct or the only solutions.
Case Study: New Balance • Please read the case “New Balance Athletic Shoe, Inc.” and think about the following questions: • What are the competitive implications of the Adidas/Reebok transaction for New Balance? You may want to refer to figures in Exhibit 2. • In what aspects did New Balance see itself differentiated from Nike, Adidas, or Reebok? • New Balance placed a disproportionately large emphasis (relative to sales generated) on serving smaller retailers and ensuring timely delivery of products to them. What are the reasons for them to do that?
New Balance – Cont. • New balance performed 25% of its manufacturing in the United states at a time when nearly all of its competitors were manufacturing 100% of their products in Asia. What are the primary reasons for them to maintain domestic manufacturing? • Suppose the total US volume of athletic shoes per year is 400 million pairs. How much is the cost penalty resulted from New Balance’s domestic manufacturing?
Case study: X-Box • Read the case on X-box and think about the following questions: • What were the challenges facing Microsoft with the original Xbox? • What supply chain changes did Microsoft make between Xbox and the Xbox 360? And what’s the motivation? • What are the benefits and risks of the global launch planned for the Xbox 360? • Microsoft planned to use three EMS firms for the Xbox 360, all manufacturing in China. What were the benefits and limitations of the approach?
Case study: and the toy recalls (A) • This case details the events leading up to the recalls at MATTEL in 2007 and highlights the difficulties a multi-national company faces in managing global operations. Please read the case carefully and think about the following questions: • What are the characteristics of the toy industry and how do they affect toy production? • Two quality problems were mentioned in the case: lead paint and small magnets. What were the causes of these problems? • What challenges do toy companies face in managing offshore-outsourcing?
Good luck on the exam! Just let me know if you have any questions!