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Chapter 12

Chapter 12. Operations Control. Learning Outcomes. Understand the basic requirements for controlling operating costs Define quality from the perspective of an operations manager Explain the concept of total quality management (TQM). Learning Outcomes.

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Chapter 12

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  1. Chapter12 Operations Control

  2. Learning Outcomes • Understand the basic requirements for controlling operating costs • Define quality from the perspective of an operations manager • Explain the concept of total quality management (TQM)

  3. Learning Outcomes • Define the following terms: continuous improvement, kaizen, six sigma, lean manufacturing and quality at the source • Understand the difference between raw material, in-process and finished-goods inventory classifications • Explain the concept of just-in-time (JIT) inventory

  4. Operations Control • Effective Operations systems • Design • Control • Process monitored and quality ensured • Controlling Operations Costs • Variable overhead expenses • Fixed overhead expenses • Budgets • Compare budgeted costs to actual

  5. Quality Management • Quality from perspective of manager • Achieve product/service specifications • Affect of quality on the organization • Loss of business • Liability • Costs • Productivity • Total customer response program to transfer workplace quality to customer dealings • Quality assurance

  6. Quality Management • Quality assurance • Build quality into the product, instead of inspecting quality in • All employees should be responsible for quality • W. Edwards Deming: • Cause of poor quality: system, not the employees • Management needs to correct system

  7. Total Quality Management (TQM) • Manages entire organization so that it excels in all dimensions of products and services important to the customer • Getting Started with TQM • Find out what customers want • Design a product or service to meet wants • Keep track of results • Extend concepts to suppliers and distribution

  8. Implementing TQM • Demonstrate top-down commitment • Set tough improvement goals • Determine critical measurement factors • Identify costs • Rely on teamwork • Allow time to see progress • Key internal task: culture change

  9. Barriers to TQM • Lack of consistency of purpose on the part of management • An emphasis on short-term profits • An inability to modify personnel review systems • Mobility of management (job hopping) • Lack of commitment to training and failure to instill leadership that is change-oriented • Excessive costs

  10. Total Quality Management (TQM) • Continuous Improvement • Kaizen • Incremental refining of existing processes • Taking small steps to improve workplace • Quality at the Source • Each employee responsible for his or her work • Six Sigma • Precise set of statistical tools for continuous improvement

  11. Total Quality Management (TQM) • ISO 9000 • International Organization for Standardization • International body that creates standards to facilitate the exchange of goods internationally • Outlined quality system requirements • ISO 14000 • Series of voluntary international standards covering environmental management tools and systems

  12. Total Quality Management (TQM) • Zero Defects • Attempts to create a positive attitude toward the prevention of low quality • Extensive communication regarding the importance of quality • Organization-wide recognition • Problem identification by employees • Employee goal setting

  13. Total Quality Management (TQM) • Malcolm Baldrige Awards • An award given to honor companies’ quality achievements

  14. Types of Quality Control • Product quality control • Quality is being evaluated with respect to a batch of products or services • Process quality control • Monitoring quality while the product or service is in process

  15. Types of Quality Control • Acceptance sampling • Method of predicting the quality of a batch by taking a sample from the batch • Used for the following reasons: • Cost of passing defective items not great relative to the cost of inspections • Inspection requires destruction of product • Sampling produces faster results

  16. Types of Quality Control • Process control chart • Time-based graphic that shows whether a machine or process is producing output at the expected quality level • Charts calculate the desired level of a characteristic • Calculate upper & lower limits to determine how much characteristic can vary before machine/process is considered out of control

  17. Inventory Control • Raw materials • The parts that go into making a completed good • In process • Products that are not finished yet, but have entering the manufacturing system • Finished goods • Goods that are finished and ready for shipping

  18. Inventory Control • Inventories allow for: • Purchase, produce and ship in economic lot sizes rather than in small jobs • Produce on a smooth, continuous basis even if the demand for the finished product or raw material fluctuates • Prevent major problems when forecasts of demand are in error or when unforeseen slowdowns or stoppages in supply or production occur

  19. Jus- in-Time (JIT) Inventory Systems • A system that schedules materials to arrive and leave as they are needed. In other words, large inventories are not kept in stock

  20. Tracking Inventory • Bar code technology reduces errors in tracking inventory • RFIP • Physical inventory • Process of counting the number of units a company has in stock • Independent demand items • Finished goods or end products that are sold or shipped as opposed to being used in making another product

  21. Just-in-Time (JIT) Inventory Systems • Dependant demand items • Goods that are subassemblies or component parts, which are used to make some finished product • ABC classification system • Manages inventories based on the total value of their usage per unit of time • Grouping items establishes appropriate control over each item

  22. Just-in-Time (JIT) Inventory Systems • Safety stock • Accommodates unexpected changes in demand • Ordering costs include costs of preparing an order, shipping costs and setup costs • Economic ordering quality refers to the point at which ordering costs equal carrying costs

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