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Manufacturin g and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

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Page 1: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Manufacturing and Service Process Structures

CHAPTER FIVE

McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Page 2: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Capacity PlanningCapacity Planning

5–5–22

• Capacity: the amount of output that can be created by, a process, with a given level of resources over a given time period

Page 3: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Economies & Diseconomies of scaleEconomies & Diseconomies of scale

5–5–33

• Economies of Scale: If the output rate is less than the optimal level, increasing output rate results in decreasing average unit costs

• Diseconomies of Scale: If the output rate is more than the optimal level, increasing the output rate results in increasing average unit costs

Cost per Unit

Volume (Number of Units)

Diseconomies of ScaleEconomies of Scale

Figure 5-1

Page 4: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Reasons for Economies of ScaleReasons for Economies of Scale

1. Allocation of fixed costs

2. Equipment and construction costs

3. Lower costs for purchases

4. Learning curves

5–5–44

Page 5: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Product-Process MatrixProduct-Process Matrix

5–5–55

High

Variety

Flexibility

Cost

Low

CellularManufacturing

MassCustomization

Project

Job Shop

Batch

ContinuousProcess

RepetitiveProcess

Low Volume High

Figure 5-2

Page 6: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Mass customization: mass production + customization

Real world example: Dell

http://www.mymms.com/default.aspx

5–5–66

Mass customizationMass customization

Page 7: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Cellular manufacturing: production of products with similar process characteristics on small assembly lines called cells

5–5–77

Cellular manufacturingCellular manufacturing

Page 8: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

ActivityActivity

• Identify a product :

–Project

–Job Shop

–Batch

–Repetitive

–Continuous

5–5–88

Page 9: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Process Structure and Market OrientationProcess Structure and Market Orientation

• Engineer to Order (ETO): unique, customized products

–Example: house building, specialized equipment

• Make to Order (MTO): similar design, customized during production

–Example: Meal at an elegant restaurant, haircut

5–5–99

Page 10: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Process Structure and Market OrientationProcess Structure and Market Orientation

• Assemble to Order (ATO): produced from standard components and modules

–Example: Dell, subway sandwiches

• Make to Stock (MTS): goods made and held in inventory in advance of customer orders

–Example: Groceries, bookstore

5–5–1010

Page 11: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Service Process MatrixService Process Matrix

5–5–1111

Service

Factory

Service

Shop

Mass

Service

Professional

Service

Low

High

Labor

Intensity

Customization/Customer InteractionLow High

Figure 5-3

Page 12: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Service BlueprintingService Blueprinting

• Physical evidence: tangibles the customers see or collect from the organization

• Customer actions: all actions done by customers during service delivery

• Front office: employee actions in the face-to-face encounter

• Back office: behind the scenes activities

• Support processes: activities necessary for the service, done by employees without direct customer contact

5–5–1212

Page 13: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Service BlueprintingService BlueprintingService BlueprintingService Blueprinting

5–5–1313Figure 5-4

Page 14: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Operations LayoutOperations Layout

• Product layout: resources arranged by regularly occurring sequence of activities

• Process layout: groups together similar resources or functions they perform

• Fixed layout: product cannot be moved during production

• Cellular layout: group technology. Product layout inside the group

5–5–1414

Page 15: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

A Product LayoutA Product LayoutA Product LayoutA Product Layout

InIn

OutOut

Page 16: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Process LayoutProcess Layout Process LayoutProcess Layout

Page 17: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

• High rate of output• Low unit cost• Labor specialization• High utilization of labor and equipment• Established routing and scheduling

Advantages of Product LayoutAdvantages of Product LayoutAdvantages of Product LayoutAdvantages of Product Layout

Page 18: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

• Creates dull, repetitive jobs• Fairly inflexible to changes in volume• Highly susceptible to shutdowns• Needs preventive maintenance

Disadvantages of Product LayoutDisadvantages of Product LayoutDisadvantages of Product LayoutDisadvantages of Product Layout

Page 19: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

• Can handle a variety of processing requirements

• Not particularly vulnerable to equipment failures

Advantages of Process LayoutsAdvantages of Process LayoutsAdvantages of Process LayoutsAdvantages of Process Layouts

Page 20: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

• In-process inventory costs can be high• Challenging routing and scheduling• Equipment utilization rates are low

Disadvantages of Process LayoutsDisadvantages of Process LayoutsDisadvantages of Process LayoutsDisadvantages of Process Layouts

Page 21: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Fixed-Position LayoutsFixed-Position LayoutsFixed-Position LayoutsFixed-Position Layouts

Typical of projects in which product produced is too fragile, bulky, or heavy to move

Equipment, workers, materials, other resources brought to the site

Low equipment utilization Highly skilled labor Typically low fixed cost Often high variable costs

Page 22: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Cellular LayoutsCellular Layouts

1. Identify families of parts with similar flow paths

2. Group machines into cells based on part families

3. Arrange cells so material movement is minimized

4. Locate large shared machines at point of use

Page 23: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Parts FamiliesParts FamiliesParts FamiliesParts Families

A family of A family of similar partssimilar parts

A family of related A family of related grocery itemsgrocery items

Page 24: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Line Balancing in Product LayoutsLine Balancing in Product Layouts

Used to assign individual tasks to work areas for a desired output rate

1. Determine precedence relationships

2. Calculate Takt time

3. Determine minimum number of work stations = Total of all task times/takt time

4. Determine efficiency = [sum of all task times/(actual work stations X takt time)] X 100

5–5–2424

dayperneededoutput

daypertimeproductionavailable

Page 25: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Line BalancingLine BalancingLine BalancingLine Balancing

5–5–2525

A B CD

EF G

Task PredecessorsTime

(minutes)

A Shape dough None 2

B Add pizza sauce A 1

C Add cheese B 2

D Add sausage C 0.75

E Add pepperoni C 1

F Package pizza D, E 1.5

G Label package F 0.5

Total Time: 8.75

Page 26: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Line balancingLine balancing

1) Takt time: maximum allowable cycle time at each work station. Takt time= available production time per day/output needed per day

1) Example: demand =200 working 8 hours per day

1) Takt time = 480 mins/ 200 =2.4 minutes/ station or pizza

5–5–2626

Page 27: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Line balancingLine balancing

2) Theoretical minimum number of station= total of task time/ takt time

N= (2+1+2+.75+1+1.5+.5)/2.4 mins = 3.7 = 4 stations

Note: actual stations needed is 5, why?

3) Efficiency=[(total task time/(number of actual work station)(takt time)] * 100

[(2+1+2+.75+1+1.5+.5)/(5 stations)(2.4)]*100 =73%

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Page 28: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Break Even AnalysisBreak Even Analysis

5–5–2828Figure 5-4

Page 29: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Break Even PointBreak Even Point

A firm has variable costs of per unit of $3 and annual fixed costs of $30,000. What is the break-even point if the sales prices is 8$ per unit

Total Revenue = Total Cost

TR = $8 * volume and TC = $30,000 + $3 * volume

$8 * volume = $30,000 + $3 * volume

$5 * volume = $30,000

volume = 6,000 units per year

5–5–2929

Page 30: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Chapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problems

• Do problems 2 on page 149

• Do problems below

• The owner of Old-fashioned berry pies is contemplating adding a new line of pies, which requires leasing cost of $6,000 per month. Variable cost would be $2.0 and retail price would be $7.0. ( refer to next page for problems)

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Page 31: Manufacturing and Service Process Structures CHAPTER FIVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Chapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problemsChapter 5 homework problems

1) How many pies should be sold to break even?

2) What would the profit be if 1,000 pies are sold?

3) How many pies should be sold to realize a profit of $4,000?

4) If 2,000 can be sold, and a profit target is $5,000, what price should be charged ?

1–1–3131