Science and art of ensuring good and services are created and delivered successfully to customers.
Operations Management
T OR F: OM is important because it makes companies successful.
True
Why is OM important?
It makes companies successful.
Predict future demand for raw materials, finished goods, and services.
Forecasting
Manage flow of materials, info, people, and money from suppliers to customers.
Supply Chain Management
Determine best configuration of machines, storage offices, and departments.
Facility Layout & Design
Using technology to improve productivity and respond faster to customers.
Technology selection
Ensuring goods, services, and processes will meet customer expectations and requirements.
Product inspected and conform to the highest quality standards. If not, it was removed from inventory to determine where the process broke down and to initiate corrective action.
Quality Management
Coordinate the acquisition of materials. supplies, and services.
Purchasing
Ensure that the right amount of resources (labor, equipment, materials, and information) is available when needed.
Resource & Capacity Management
Select the right equipment, information, and work methods to produce high-quality goods and services efficiently.
When a new product was to be introduced, the best way to produce it had to be determined. Charting the detailed steps needed to make the product.
Process Design
Decide the best way to assign people to work tasks and job responsibilities.
Job Design
Determine the best types of interactions between service providers and customers, and how to recover from service upsets.
Service encounter design
Determine when resources such as employees and equipment should be assigned to work.
Created to ensure that enough product was available for both retail and wholesale customers.
Scheduling
Decide the best way to manage the risks associated with products and operations to preserve resources for future generations.
Sustainability
This was tightly controlled to keep cost down and to avoid production that wasn’t needed.
Inventory Management
A value chain begins with _____ who provide inputs to a goods-producing or service-providing process or network of processes.
Suppliers
Physical product that you can see, touch, or possibly consume.
Good
Does not quickly wear out and typically lasts at least three years.
Durable good
No longer useful once it’s used, or lasts for less than three years.
Nondurable good
Any primary or complementary activity that does not directly produce a physical product.
Service
Which of the following statements is NOT true of goods and services?
a. Service encounters can be between a customer and a service provider.
b. Services cannot be stored as inventory for future sale.
c. A shoe is a durable good that provides a service.
d. Normally, patents do not protect services.
C
The three issues that are at the core of operations management include all of the following EXCEPT _____.
a. cost
b. quality
c. tangibility
d. efficiency
C
Which of the following key activities is NOT performed by operations managers?
a. Purchasing
b. Cost accounting
c. Forecasting
d. Service encounter design
B