Bussines Management

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B207A Big ideas in organizations

Shaping Business Opportunities I

Block 1

Session 8: Introduction to operations management

Block 1- Reading 11

Introduction to operations management

What is operations management?

The operations management function is responsible for the efficient delivery of goods and services to customers through effective management of the organization's resources to meet their customers’ needs.

Efficiency is achieved through good process design, effective planning and control systems and an entire workforce that is involved in continuously improving processes and systems.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Input-process-output model

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Input-process-output model

The diagram shows the types of resources that operations managers have to collect and use efficiently and effectively:

Fixed assets of facilities and equipment

Materials

Information used during the process.

The operations function is actually responsible for the output of goods and services that the customer pays for.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Three types of transformation processes

Material processing – Manufacturing operations, mining operations and logistics operations such as shipping, trucking, warehousing and postal services all predominantly transform materials within their processes.

Information processing – Banking, accounting, news services, telecommunications and research organizations all predominantly process information as a core part of their business.

Customer processing – Some of you may dislike the idea that operations process customers, and most people do not like to think of themselves as being ‘processed’ when they visit somewhere, such as a hotel, hairdresser, hospital or theme park.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Types of transformational change

Physical transformation – Activities such as;

The preparation of food in a restaurant kitchen

The machining of metal in an engineering workshop

The mixing of chemicals in a laboratory create a physical transformation of the resources involved

Informational transformation – All operations involve some sort of informational transformation, including transforming data in company reports or research projects through to simpler data processing such as recording booking information for a customer’s stay in a hotel.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Types of transformational change

Possession transformation:

Most retail operations involve the change in possession of goods.

Data sharing may also be considered as a change in possession.

Location transformation:

examples logistics processes of getting material to suppliers or any customer transport service.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Types of transformational change

Storage transformation:

All types of resources can be stored in some way.

Inventory is stored in warehouses

People are stored in waiting rooms

Data are stored on servers

Physiological or psychological transformation: Many types of services involve physiological/psychological transformation of the customer (medical treatments).

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Transformation process at a bakery

Table 1 is a worked example that shows the transformation processes you would be likely to see in a typical bakery.

The dominant transformation here is in material processing because the core activity is manufacturing.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management

Transformation process at a library

Table 2 shows examples of the transformation processes at a library.

The emphasis is what types of resources are being transformed and the nature of the transformation processes.

The library is an example of an operation where all types of resources are being processed. The dominant resource being utilized is information but the customer engagement activities or the material processing that occurs must not be overlooked.

Reading 11: Introduction to operations management