Cbme 101-Operations Management W/ TQM Lesson 1 - Intro To Operations MGT Lesson 2 - Production of Goods Versus Providing Services Lesson 3 - Why Learn About Operation MGT
Cbme 101-Operations Management W/ TQM Lesson 1 - Intro To Operations MGT Lesson 2 - Production of Goods Versus Providing Services Lesson 3 - Why Learn About Operation MGT
MODULE 1
LESSON 1- INTRO TO OPERATIONS MGT
LESSON 2- PRODUCTION OF GOODS VERSUS PROVIDING SERVICES
LESSON 3- WHY LEARN ABOUT OPERATION MGT
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Operations is that part of a business organization that is responsible for producing goods and/or services.
The outcome of the business operation is the harvesting of value from assets owned by the business.
Assets can be either physical or intangible. Operation is the work of managing the inner workings of your business so
it runs as efficiently as possible. Whether make a products, sell products, or provide services, every small business
owner has to oversee the design and management of behind-the-scenes work.
The specific definition of operations will depend on your industry and the stage of your business is in.
Sometimes, improving operations means thinking strategically about your system and processes. Other times, it means
seeing part of the on-the-ground work to bring every aspect of a project, from tiny to huge, to reality.
Goods are physical items that include raw materials, parts, subassemblies such as mother boards that go into
computers, and final products such as cell phones and automobiles.
Services are activities that provide some combination of time, location, form, or psychological value.
Examples of goods and services are found all around you. Every book you read, every video you watch, every
e-mail or text message you send, every telephone conversation you have, and every medical treatment you receive
involves the operations function of one or more organizations. so does everything you wear, eat, travel in, sit on, and
access the Internet with.
The ideal situation for a business organization is to achieve an economic match of supply and demand. Having
excess supply or excess capacity is wasteful and costly; having too little means lost opportunity and possible customer
dissatisfaction.
The key functions on the supply side are operations and supply chains, and sales and marketing on the
demand side. While the operations function is responsible for producing products and/or delivering services, it needs
the support and input from other areas of the organization.
If you are a retail business, as the owner of a retail business, your daily goal is to stock the items customers want at a
price they’re happy to pay. For the operations, that means perfecting your inventory.
Take a look at the records from last season. What is selling well, what’s sitting, unwanted, on the shelves? Can you
negotiate lower prices or better terms from your vendors? Would your customers be willing to pay more for any of the
items you sell?
While some of the answers will be obvious when you crunch the number and results, another operational update might
be to be implemented a software program that can be manage and optimize your inventory in real time so you can
address these questions.
Additional explanation:
Business organizations have three basic functional areas, as depicted in Figure 1.1: finance, marketing, and
operations. It doesn’t matter whether the business is a retail store, a hospital, a manufacturing firm, a car wash, or
some other type of business; all business organizations have these three basic functions.
Finance is responsible for securing financial resources at favorable prices and allocating those resources
throughout the organization, as well as budgeting, analyzing investment proposals, and providing funds for operations.
Marketing is responsible for assessing consumer wants and needs, and selling and promoting the
organization’s goods or services.
Operations is responsible for producing the goods or providing the services offered by the organization.
To put this into perspective, if a business organization were a car, operations would
be its engine. And just as the engine is the core of what a car does, in a business
organization, operations is the core of what the organization does.
Operations and supply chains are intrinsically linked, and no business organization could exist without both.
Supply Chain is the sequence of organizations—their facilities, functions, and activities—that are
involved in producing and delivering a product or service.
The sequence begins with basic suppliers of raw materials and extends all the way to the final customer, as
seen in Figure 1.2 . Facilities might include warehouses, factories, processing centers, offices, distribution centers,
and retail outlets. Functions and activities include forecasting, purchasing, inventory management, information
management, quality assurance, scheduling, production, distribution, delivery, and customer service.
Supply chain management is the management of the flow of goods and services and includes all processes that
transform raw materials into final products. It involves the active streamlining of a business's supply-side activities to
maximize customer value and gain a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
SCM represents an effort by suppliers to develop and implement supply chains that are as efficient and economical as
possible. Supply chains cover everything from production to product development to the information systems needed
to direct these undertakings.
The internal parts of a supply chain are part of the operations function itself, supplying operations with parts
and materials, performing work on products, and/or performing services.
TRANSFORMATION PROCESS
The creation of goods or services involves transforming or converting inputs into outputs. Various inputs such
as capital, labor, and information are used to create goods or services using one or more transformation processes (e.g.,
storing, transporting, repairing).
A transformation process is any activity or group of activities that takes one or more inputs, transforms and adds value
to them, and provides outputs for customers or clients. Where the inputs are raw materials, it is relatively easy to
identify the transformation involved, as when milk is transformed into cheese and butter. Where the inputs are
information or people, the nature of the transformation may be less obvious. For example, a hospital transforms ill
patients (the input) into healthy patients (the output).
Often all three types of input – materials, information and customers – are transformed by the same organisation.
For example, withdrawing money from a bank account involves information about the customer's account, materials
such as cheques and currency, and the customer. Treating a patient in hospital involves not only the ‘customer's’ state
of health, but also any materials used in treatment and information about the patient.
service – the treatment of customers or the storage of materials (for example hospital wards, warehouses).
To ensure that the desired outputs are obtained, an organization takes measurements at
various points in the transformation process (feedback) and then compares them with
previously established standards to determine whether corrective action is needed (control).
Figure 1.4 depicts the conversion system.
INPUTS
(5M’S)
MAN
MONEY
T
MACHINE
METHOD
MATERIAL
Transformed Resources. The resources that are treated, transformed or convert in the process
The actual physical materials we put into the transformation process. The transformation process can be
building something, manufacturing.
The materials, information customers and the transformed resources or the 5 ms, when we bring this thins
together into the process of transformation. The transformation process can be building something,
manufacturing.
we create an output. This are the goods and services we offer to the people
Table 1.1 provides some examples of inputs, transformation processes, and outputs. Although
goods and services are listed separately in Table 1.1, it is important to note that goods and
services often occur jointly. For example, having the oil changed in your car is a service, but the
oil that is delivered is a good. Similarly, house painting is a service, but the paint is a good.
Value-added is the term used to describe the difference between the cost of inputs and the value or price of
outputs.
In nonprofit organizations, the value of outputs (e.g., highway construction, police and fire protection) is their value
to society; the greater the value-added, the greater the effectiveness of these operations.
In for-profit organizations, the value of outputs is measured by the prices that customers are willing to pay for those
goods or services.
Firms use the money generated by value-added for research and development, investment in new facilities and
equipment, worker salaries, and profits. Consequently, the greater the value-added, the greater the amount of funds
available for these purposes.
Value can also be psychological, as in branding. Many factors affect the design and management of
operations systems. Among them are the degree of involvement of customers in the process and the degree to which
technology is used to produce and/or deliver a product or service. The greater the degree of customer involvement, the
Measurement of productivity can be more difficult for service jobs due largely to the high variations of
inputs. Thus, one doctor might have a higher level of routine cases to deal with, while another might
have more-difficult cases. Unless a careful analysis is conducted, it may appear that the doctor with the
difficult cases has a much lower productivity than the one with the routine cases.
Quality assurance is usually more challenging for services due to the higher variation in input, and
because delivery and consumption occur at the same time. Unlike manufacturing, which typically
occurs away from the customer and allows mistakes that are identified to be corrected, services have
less opportunity to avoid exposing the customer to mistakes.
Inventory. Many services tend to involve less use of inventory than manufacturing operations, so the
costs of having inventory on hand are lower than they are for manufacturing. However, unlike
manufactured goods, services cannot be stored. Instead, they must be provided “on demand.”
Wages. Manufacturing jobs are often well paid, and have less wage variation than service jobs, which
can range from highly paid professional services to minimum-wage workers.
Ability to patent. Product designs are often easier to patent than service designs, and some services
cannot be patented, making them easier for competitors to copy.
There are also many similarities between managing the production of products and managing services.
When there are important service considerations, these are highlighted in separate sections. Here
are some of the primary factors for both:
a. Forecasting and capacity planning to match supply and demand.
b. Process management.
c. Managing variations.
Note that many service activities are essential in goods-producing companies. These include training, human resource
management, customer service, equipment repair, procurement, and administrative services.
Table 1.3 provides an overview of the differences between production of goods and service operations. Remember, though, that
most systems involve a blend of goods and services.
Operations and sales are the two-line functions in a business organization. All other functions—accounting, finance,
marketing, IT, and so on—support the two-line functions.
Among the service jobs that are closely related to operations are:
financial services (e.g., stock market analyst, broker, investment banker, and loan officer),
marketing services (e.g., market analyst, marketing researcher, advertising manager, and product manager),
accounting services (e.g., corporate accountant, public accountant, and budget analyst), and
information services (e.g., corporate intelligence, library services, management information systems design services).
A common complaint from employers is that college graduates come to them very focused, when employers would
prefer them to have more of a general knowledge of how business organizations operate.
Apart from the career-related reasons is a not so obvious one: Through learning about operations and supply chains, you will
have a much better understanding of the world you live in, the global dependencies of companies and nations, some of the
reasons that companies succeed or fail, and the importance of working with others
Working together successfully means that all members of the organization understand not only their own role,
but they also understand the roles of others. In practice, there is significant interfacing and collaboration among the
various functional areas, involving exchange of information and cooperative decision making.
For example, although the three primary functions in business organizations perform different activities, many of their
decisions impact the other areas of the organization. Consequently, these functions have numerous interactions, as
depicted by the overlapping circles shown in Figure 1.6.
3. Provision of funds. The necessary funding of operations and the amount and timing of funding can be
important and even critical when funds are tight. Careful planning can help avoid cash-flow problems.
Operations also interacts with other functional areas of the organization, including legal, management
information systems (MIS), accounting, personnel/human resources, and public relations, as depicted in Figure 1.7.
Legal department must be consulted on contracts with employees, customers, suppliers, and
transporters, as well as on liability and environmental issues.
Accounting supplies information to management on costs of labor, materials, and overhead, and may
provide reports on items such as scrap, downtime, and inventories.
Management information systems (MIS) is concerned with providing management with the
information it needs to effectively manage. This occurs mainly through designing systems to capture relevant
information and designing reports. MIS is also important for managing the control and decision-making tools used in
operations management.
-END OF WEEK 1-