Summary: Operations Management Sustainability And Supply Chain Management | 9781292295039 | Jay Heizer, et al
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Read the summary and the most important questions on Operations Management Sustainability and Supply Chain Management | 9781292295039 | Jay Heizer; Barry Render; Chuck Munson
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1 Week 1
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1.1.1.1 Goods and services
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Which 5 things do operation managers?
- Planning
- Organizing
- Staffing (hoeveel personeel nodig. Hoeveel zetten we waar in)
- Leading
- Controlling
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1.1.1.2 Organizing to produce goods and services
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What are the 3 most essential functions in a firm?
- Marketing: generates demand
Production/operations : creates the product- Finance/accounting: tracks how well the organization is doing, pays bills, collects the money
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1.1.1.5 The supply chain
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What's the difference between operation management and supply chain management?
- Operation management: looking into the operations of individual companies in the supply chain
- Supply chain management: exploring the supply chain as a whole
- Operation management: looking into the operations of individual companies in the supply chain
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1.1.1.6 Areas of interest
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Into which three categories can the subjects that will be dealt with in this course roughly be divided?
- Performance requirements and analysis
- Process design
- Planning and scheduling
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1.1.1.7.1 Productivity
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What are the three characteristics of productivity?
- Measure of product improvement
- Represents output relative to input
- Productivity increase improves standard of living
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1.1.1.9 Overview: planning and scheduling
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Which 3 levels of planning do you have?
- Long-term
- Intermediate(=gemiddeld, tussen liggend)-term
- Short-term
- Long-term
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1.2.3.1 Learning curve effects
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What are the 3 characteristics of the learning curve effect?
- Time needed to produce a unit decreases with each additional unit
- Time needed decreases at a decreasing rate as cumulative(=dat steeds bij elkaar opgeteld is) production increases
- Decrease in time follows an exponential curve called: learning or experience curve
- Time needed to produce a unit decreases with each additional unit
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1.2.3.3 Arithmetic approach
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What is the meaning of the learning rate L?
Each time the production doubles, then the time needed for producing a unit will equal the production time multiplied by L
NB De tijd neemt steeds minder hard af. Is ook in de learning graph te zien, waar tussen de eerste punten heel weinig ruimte zit en later steeds meer. -
1.2.4 Mod. D
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Waiting line terminology. What is:QueueArrivalQueue disciplineChannelPhase
- Queue: waiting line
- Arrival: 1 person, machine, part etc. That arrives and demand services
- Queue discipline: rules of determining the order that arrivals receive service (vaak FIFO, maar op eerste hulp bv niet)
- Channel: number of servers
- Phase: number of steps in service
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Where does labda and mu stand for?
- Labda: mean of arrivals
- Mu: mean of service rate
Zie afbeelding. Die formules die daar op staan hoef je niet te kennen, achtergrond info.
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Topics related to Summary: Operations Management Sustainability And Supply Chain Management
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Inventory Management - Mod. D
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Throughput time
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Utilisation rate
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Process strategies
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Product lay-out - assembly line balancing
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Proces layout (or functional layout)
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