Chapter 1 Operations and productivity 1. Why should one study operations management? We study OM for four reasons. We study how people organize themselves for productive enterprise. We study OM because we want to know how goods and services are produced. We study OM to understand what operations managers do. We study OM because it is such a costly part of an organization. Productivity can be measured in a variety of ways‚ such as by labor‚ capital‚ energy‚ material usage‚ and so on. At Modern
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ust-In-Time (JIT) is a very simple idea but one that is essential in modern supply chain management. JIT sets out to cut costs by reducing the amount of goods and materials a firm holds in stock. JIT involves: producing and delivering finished goods ‘just in time’ to be sold partly finished goods ‘just in time’ to be assembled into finished goods parts ‘just in time’ to go into partly finished goods materials ‘just in time’ to be made into parts. The principle that underpins JIT is that production
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I. Case: McDonald’s “Fast-Food” Restaurant - 35% - discuss thoroughly. Mary Marino manages a McDonald’s restaurant. She has noticed that senior citizens have become not just regular patrons – but patrons who come for breakfast and stay on until 3:00 p.m. Many of these older customers were attracted initially by a monthly breakfast special for people aged 55 and older. The meal costs $.99 and refills of coffee are free. Every fourth Monday‚ 100 to 150 seniors jam Mary’s McDonald for the special
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business 1.1. The main products and services The products of Mcdonalds are fast foods of wide range of choices‚ such as: hamburgers‚ chicken‚ french fries‚ soft drinks‚ coffee‚ milkshakes‚ salads‚ deserts and breakfast with varies of famous in the world brands (Big Mac‚ Quarter Pounder with Cheese‚ Filet-O-Fish‚ Chicken McNuggets‚ Chicken Selects‚ Snack Wraps‚ McFlurry‚ McCafe‚ …) which meet requirement of customers of different ages. Mcdonalds fast foods have became necessary daily foods for the numbers
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resources which‚ when imple- mented‚ are difficult or impossible to modify without major added costs.(T/F) T Increasing capacity just before a bottleneck operation will improve the output of the process. (T/F)F 7. Design capacity refers to the maximum output that can possibly be attained. (T/F)T Among decision environments‚ risk implies that certain parameters
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Introduction to Operations Management Learning Objectives * Define the term operations management * Identify the three major functional areas of organizations and describe how they interrelate * Compare and contrast service and manufacturing operations * Describe the operations function and the nature of the operations manager’s job * Differentiate between design and operation of production systems * Describe the key aspects of operations management
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.................................................................................... 2 2.0 Purpose of the Study ............................................................................................................... 2 3.0 Methodology .......................................................................................................................... 3 4.0 Limitation of the Study .........................................................................................................
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Chapter 01 OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT: as a competitive weapon mks mks@mdi.ac.in http://mks507.vistapanel.net Prof. (Dr.) Manoj K Srivastava Operations Management Area 1. The Systems Approach C O N T E N T S 2. 3. OM Definition Ten Critical Decisions 4. 5. The Cases 4V Typology of Operations 6. 7. Productivity Competitiveness 8. 9. Manufacturing Vs. Service? The History 10. The Future 1 Systems Approach Systems Approach Reduce waste…or
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Case chapter 10: Wolf Motors. 1: What recommendations would you make to John Wolf with respect to structuring the supplier relationship process for the Wolf Motors dealership network? Recommendations for Wolf Motors in order to be able to structure their supplier relationship process are: ❖ They should consider a centralized materials management system to study‚ calculate and make the decisions on what will be bought for each of the 4 dealerships instead of allowing each dealer to
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Contents Introduction 1 1. Key challenges that have become very significant to IKEA managers with regard to operations management 1.1 Changing Technologies 1.2 Continued Globalization of Markets 1.3 Changing Customer Expectations 1.4 Changing Job Designs 1.5 Quality Management 1.6 Global Manufacturing 3 3 4 5 6 6 7 2. Areas of operations management likely to to have the most impact on the success of IKEA
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