Starting up a cookie company on-campus You and your roommate are preparing to start a company producing cookies in your oncampus apartment. By starting up this business‚ you want to provide fresh cookies to starving fellow students late at night. However‚ you still have to figure out some aspects of the business model such as the price to charge‚ whether you will be able to make profit and how many orders you can accept. The business concept You have an extraordinary idea: to bake fresh cookies
Premium Baking Process management Cookies
Question 1 Rush order takes the least possible time for preparing the dozen of cookies. The following is a detailed summary of time used to prepare the rush order: Activity Time Wash the bowl‚ add and mix ingredients 6 minutes Dish up the tray (1 dozen) 2 minutes Put the cookies in the oven‚ start timer 1 minute Bake the cookies 9 minutes Remove the tray from the oven* 0 minute Let the cookies cool 5 minutes Pack the cookies 2 minutes Accept payment 1 minute Total time: 26 minutes
Premium Baking The Time Girl
Case: KRISTEN’S COOKIE COMPANY The case described about Kristen’s cookie company which provide freshly made cookies with variety of ingredients available to add to the cookies. The company is established in the on campus apartment. The cookies are made by 2 people‚ using a standard dough mixing equipment‚ tray and the apartment oven. Below is the explanation and evaluation of the preliminary process design in making and selling the cookies to the customers. Kristen’s cookie company promises that
Premium Baking Mathematics
The Firebake Cookie Company proposes to introduce a unique new product in the Kansas City area‚ and this report provides a macro-environmental analysis to predict the cookie’s profitability. The “Firebake Cookie” is a new concept in outdoor cooking marketed towards hikers‚ campers‚ and other outdoor enthusiasts. Utilizing political‚ economic‚ sociological‚ technological‚ legal‚ and environmental analysis (PESTLE)‚ the “Firebake Cookie” concept has potential to be a profitable endeavor.
Premium United States Tariff Dutch oven
Pillsbury cookie challenge — Presentation Transcript 1. • By the end of this presentation you will be convinced that Pillsbury can increase its household penetration by re-engaging with existing users‚ by adapting to new consumer demands‚ and by altering the perception of the product in the minds of consumers. 2. • Background• Challenges in the Canadian Market• The Pillsbury Sub-Culture• Study Results• Strengths and Opportunities• New Market Segmentation• Recommendations• Implementation Timeline•
Premium Baking Marketing
Solution to Kristen’s Cookie Company (A) Before answering specific questions‚ it is useful to make a diagram of the overall process: Note that in this diagram‚ activities are arranged in columns to indicate which resources are being used. Inside each activity symbol are written the capacity (in dozens of cookies) and the cycle time (in minutes). 1. How long will it take for you to fill a rush order? Assuming this order is for one dozen cookies‚ we will need to do the following: Activity
Premium Marketing Strategic management Management
KRISTEN’S COOKIE CASE FOR DR. JUN-YEON LEE MGMT 6355 FALL 2010 BY: AMIN DADWANI KRISTEN’S COOKIE COMPANY INTRODUCTION: A couple of students‚ roommates‚ planned to launch a cookie company in there on campus apartment. The purpose was to serve freshly baked cookies to hungry students late night by taking orders online. They needed following equipments and ingredients in process of making Cookies: - 1-Equipment: - Oven‚ Food processor‚ Cooking tray‚ Spoons. 2-Ingredient:
Premium Baking Rate equation
Time Roommate Time Mix Ingredients = 6 minutes Place cookies in oven = 1 minute Cookies onto tray = 2 minutes Pack Cookies = 2 minutes Receive Payment = 1 minute Total Time = 8 minutes Total Time = 4 minutes Question 4: For Kristen’s Cookies develop a Gantt Chart of the activities and the resources (Kristen‚ Roommate and Oven). Determine the amount of idle time Kristen and Roommate has for each dozen cookies produced. What is the time for Kristen and Roommate if the orders are
Premium Project management Baking Bottleneck
Case Report: Kristen’s Cookie Company 1. Assuming that the order contains a dozen of cookies‚ the time to take a rush order is the sum of cycle times for each activity: 0+6+2+9+1+0+5+2+1=26 min. 2. Assuming a two dozens order‚ we have to consider that for the first dozen‚ my roommate can start backing after I have spooned the cookies on the tray. However when backing the second order he simultaneously cools and then packs the cookies from the first order. I can start mixing the second batch
Premium
4/20/14 DSC 335‚ Spring 2014 Kristen’s Cookies Precase 1. It will take 26 minutes to fill one rush order (6+2+10+5+2+1= 26 minutes). Gantt chart is also attached. 2. The cycle time is 10 minutes because the bottleneck is the time they have to wait for the cookies to bake in the oven. They cannot continue the cookie process without baking and the lack of room in the oven or additional ovens are the constraints that are limiting the total operation. The capacity of the operation would be 6
Premium Baking Project management Bottleneck