Module 10
Module 10
Production and
Service
Operations
Engineering Management
Module 10
• Operation refers to “any process that accepts inputs
Operations and uses resources to change those inputs in useful
ways.”
What is Operation?
2
• Here are some examples of final goods and services:
consultancy firms
• Operations is an activity that need to be managed by
4
• The engineer manager is expected to produce some
Operations and output at whatever management level he is. If he is
the Engineer
assigned as the manufacturing engineer, his function is “to
determine and define the equipment, tools, and processes
• Professional service
Manufacturing • Job Shop is one whose production is “based on sales
Processes orders for a variety of small lots.” Job shops are very
useful components of the entire production effort,
since they manufacture products in small lots that are
needed by, but cannot be produced economically by
many companies.
• Job shops usually produce custom products. Products
may be manufactured within a short notice. The
equipment used are of the general purpose type.
1. Job Shop 7
Manufacturing • The batch flow process is where lots of generally own
contractors.
Manufacturing • An assembly line refers to a production layout
3. Worker-paced assembly
line 9
Manufacturing • This type of production process produces mostly
4. Machine-paced assembly
line 10
Manufacturing • Is characterized “by the rapid rate at which items move
6. Batch/Continuous Flow
Hybrid 12
• A service factory offers a limited mix of services which
1. Service Factory 13
• A service shop provides a diverse mix of services. The
Service layout used are those for job shops or fixed position
and are adaptable to various requirements. Among the
Processes service provided by service shops are car engine tune-
up, wheel balancing, wheel alignment, etc.
2. Service Shop 14
• A mass service company provides service to a large
3. Mass Service 15
• These are companies that provide specialized services
Processes
1. Engineering consulting services which help in
improving the plant layout or the efficiency of a
company.
2. Design services which supply design for a physical
plant, products, and promotion materials.
3. Advertising agencies which help promote a firm’s
products.
4. Accounting services
5. Legal services
6. Data processing services
7. Health services
4. Professional Service 16
Important parts • Productive systems consist of six important activities
of productive as follows:
17
Important parts • Customers expect that the products they buy would
of productive perform according to assigned functions. A good
product design assures that this will be so. Customers
systems avoid buying products with poor product design. An
example is that certain brand of ballpen which fails to
write after one or two days of actual use. This happens
because of poor product design.
• Product design refers to “the process of creating a set
of product specifications appropriate to the demands
of the situation.”
1. Product Design 18
Important parts • Production planning may be defined as “forecasting
of productive the future sales of a given product, translating this
forecast into the demand it generates for various
systems production facilities, and arranging for the
procurement of these facilities.
– Production planning is a very important activity
because it helps management to make decisions
regarding capacity. When the right decisions are
made, there will be less opportunities for wastages.
– Scheduling is the “phase of production control
involved in developing timetables that specify how
long each operation in the production process
takes.” Efficient scheduling assures the
2. Production Planning optimization of the use of human and nonhuman
resources.
and Scheduling 19
Important parts • Firms need to purchase supplies and materials required
of productive in the various production activities. The management
of purchasing and materials must be undertaken with a
systems high degree of efficiency and effectiveness specially in
firms engaged in high volume production. The wider
variety of supplies and materials needed adds to the
necessity of proper managing and purchasing of
materials.
• Materials management refers to “the approach that
seeks efficiency of operation through integration of all
material acquisition, movement, and storage activities
in the firm.”
3. Purchasing and
Material Management 20
Important parts • Inventory control is the process of establishing and
of productive maintaining appropriate levels of reserve stocks of
goods. As supplies and materials are required by firms
systems in the production process, these must be kept available
when they are needed.
– Too much reserves of stocks will penalize the firm
in terms of high storage costs and other related
risks like obsolescence and theft.
– Too little reserves, on the other hand, may mean
lost income opportunities if production activities
are hampered.
• A balance between the two extremes must be
determined.
4. Inventory Control 21
Important parts • Work flow layout is the process of determining the physical
arrangement of the production system. In the transformation
systems
customers satisfied.
• Poor quality control breeds customer complaints, returned
merchandise, expensive lawsuits and huge promotional
expenditures.
6. Quality Control 23