180 likes | 447 Views
Kitchen M.I.S. MGMT 393 27 November, 2010 Grant Hatten Heather Hengsteler Anh Linh Scott Randall Eulanda Shingleton. Contents. Introduction Statement of problem Alternatives Considered Goals of the New System Implementation
E N D
Kitchen M.I.S. MGMT 393 27 November, 2010 Grant Hatten Heather Hengsteler Anh Linh Scott Randall Eulanda Shingleton
Contents • Introduction • Statement of problem • Alternatives Considered • Goals of the New System • Implementation • Cost Benefits Analysis • Conclusion
Introduction • Prep cooks spend too much time doing data management • Prep cook • one of the higher paying jobs • using them for inventory is inappropriate • Director of the Dietary Department requests a MIS for the kitchen
Statement of Problem • 1. How the patients order their food • Order forms often lost • No ability to track nutrition • 2. How cafeteria plans their menu • No electronic tracking of the inventory • Increased spoilage • 3. Paper system • Currently system uses paper slips • Often gets misplaced
Alternatives Considered • 1. Stay with the current system • Advantages • already in place • requires no additional training costs • proven to work • Disadvantages • difficult to track customer preferences • extensive inventory • higher labor costs • increased error rate • no customer nutrition tracking
Alternatives Considered • 2. Modify the current system • Advantages • minimal cost • little risk • Disadvantages • band-aid: short-term solution • can create as many problems as it solves
Alternatives Considered • 3. Contract the service out • Advantages • possible cost savings • Disadvantages • loss of control • possible privacy violations
Solution Selected • Install a new expert system that will integrate inventory, ordering and track nutritional needs.
Goals of the New System • Sales promotion • Monitoring of the increase and decrease of sales • Identify problem areas • Track incoming and outgoing inventory • Provide nutritional information for each food item on the daily menu
Goals of the New System • Create catering menu • Maintain customer-purchasing records • Maintain records of cooking and kitchen appliance maintenance • Track patient satisfaction
Implementation • The MIS System • parallel implementation system • 1-tier infrastructure • electronic data interchange, EDI, model with secure sockets layers • biometric processing • Cave Automatic Virtual Environment
Implementation • Personnel • Director of the Dietary Department will head quality control • Head nurse will train nursing staff • Administrative Assistant control orders and paperwork • Training sessions for all personnel
Cost Benefits Analysis • Cost
Cost Benefits Analysis • Benefits
Cost Benefits Analysis • Investment
Conclusion • Concerns about data management • Various options considered • Best solution is installation of Kitchen Management Information System
Bibliography: Anatomy of Common EDI Transactions. (2007). Retrieved Nov 29, 2010, from EDI Services: http://www.edi-services.com/850-purchase-order-elements.htm McIntire, D. (2010, Dec 7). Laser Scanning Mushpot Cave . Retrieved Dec 7, 2010, from The American Surveyor:http://www.amerisurv.com/content/view/8121/ Stephen Haag, M. C. (2010). Management Information Systems for the Information Age . 8th Ed. New York: The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.