Current Event Assignment2
Products and Processes
14
Introduction to
MATERIALS MANAGEMENT
CHAPTER
Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
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Copyright © 2017 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Product Life Cycle
Introduction Phase
Expensive, risky with low sales volume
Growth Phase
Rapid increase in sales and profits, unsuccessful designs “forced out”
Maturity Phase
Sales “flatten”, prices/profits fall due to competition
Decline Phase
Both sales and profits tend to fall as product nears end of its “life”
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Life Cycle of a Product
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Product Development Principles
Simplification
Cut waste by eliminating needless varieties, sizes, and types
Remove unnecessary products and variations
Standardization
Develop a well-defined specification for material, configuration, etc.
Many products use modularization – standardized parts for flexibility and variety
Specialization – focus of efforts and design
Product or market focus – serve a defined customer group
Process focus – concentrate on a particular process
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Focused Factory
Narrow product mix for niche market
Repetiton and concentrated workforce and equipment in one area allow for advantages of specialization
“Factory within a factory”
An area in an existing factory set aside to specialize in a narrow product mix
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Other Product Design Issues
Product design: responsible for producing a set of specifications that manufacturing can use to make the product
Products must be designed to be
Functional
Designed to perform as specified in the marketplace
Capable of low-cost processing
Must create design to minimize manufacturing costs
Specifications, materials, tolerances, assembly
Standardization
Environmentally (“green”) sensitive
Efficiently use resources
Reduce consumption of energy
Easily separated for reuse and recycling
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Simultaneous Engineering
Concurrent (simultaneous) Engineering
Product and process engineering working together for:
Optimal functionality in the marketplace
Low cost manufacturing
Other cross functional engagement
Reduced time to market
Reduced cost to design
Better quality
Lower total cost
Collaboration with suppliers, customers
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Process Design
Process = means by which operations management reaches objectives of
Producing products and services customers want
When they want it
Required quality
Desired cost
High effectiveness and productivity
Nesting
Several small processes linked to form a larger process
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Mass Customization
Production of customized products at same cost as mass-produced product
Flexible and efficient operations
Quick redesign based on customer need
Can occur at the final stage of the production stage (Postponement)
Combines flexibility, agility, and knowledge of customer need
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Factors Influencing Process Designs
Product design and quality levels needed
Process much be capable of achieving the quality level
Demand patterns and flexibility needed for fluctuation
Quantity and capacity considerations
Degree of customer involvement
Environmental concerns – “green” sensitivity
Example: Water-based paints
Make or buy decisions
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Relationship Between Product Design, Process Design, and
Relationship Between Product Design, Process Design, and Capacity
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Reasons to Make In-house
Can produce at a lower cost
Utilization of existing equipment
Maintain control of confidential processes
Maintain better quality control
Maintain workforce
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Reasons to Buy
Less requirement for capital investment
Rely on specialized expertise of suppliers
Allow firm to concentrate on own area of specialization
Provide for competitive pricing
Can accommodate large volume changes
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Processing Equipment
General-purpose machinery
Used for a variety of operations or products
Less costly
More human input – Quality level more variable
Special-purpose machinery
Perform specific operations on small number of similar products
Less flexible
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Process Systems
Flow process
Product layout
Limited range of similar products flow from workstation to workstation at a nearly constant rate
Intermittent processes
Goods made at intervals in lots or batches
Process (functional) layout
Project or fixed position processes
Large, complex, unique
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Process Costing
Job Costing
Often used with multiple products produced within a time period
Labor, material, overhead allocated to the product
Process Costing
Often used for continuous processes
Costs consumed during a period allocated to departments or operations rather then a specific product
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Continuous Process Improvement
Improving productivity
Better and faster machinery and equipment
Designing or improving work methods to maximize productivity
Better use of existing resources
Removing work content
People involvement
Maximize potential of flexible, motivated workers
Participation of everyone
Improvement in methods requiring little capital
Team concept
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Continuous Process Improvement
Select the process to be studied
Record and collect data in a useful form
Analyze the data to generate improved methods
Evaluate alternatives and select method
Implement as standard practice
Maintain the new method
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Continuous Process Improvement
Economic considerations
Cost of improvement must be justified
One to two year payback is most common
Job size must justify the time working on it
Human factor
Governs the success
Resistance to change
Focus on pleasant or unsafe working conditions
Intangible benefits
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Pareto Analysis: Select problems with the greatest economic impact
Determine method of classifying data
Select unit of measure
Collect data for appropriate time interval
Summarize data by ranking in descending order
Calculate total cost
Calculate % of each item
Construct bar graph showing % for each item and line graph of cumulative %
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Pareto Diagram
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Cause-and-Effect Diagram (Fishbone or Ishikawa))
Identify problem to be studied
Generate ideas about main causes
Materials
Machines
People
Methods
Measurement
Environment
Brainstorm all possible causes for each main cause
Identify most likely root causes
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Cause and effect diagrams – and example
Cause-and-Effect Diagram
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Record Facts Related to Process
Process boundaries – starting and ending point
Process flow – what happens between start and end
Process inputs and outputs
Components – resources used in changing inputs to outputs
Customers – rates the effectiveness of the output
Suppliers – provide the inputs
Business environment – internal and external
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Schematic of a process
Schematic of Process
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Process Flow Charts – Classes of Activity
Classes of activity
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Operations Process Chart
Record in sequence only the main operations and inspections
High level view of the process
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Process Flow Diagram
Graphic and sequential representation of the various steps, events and operations that make up a process
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Analyze
Find root cause
Questioning attitude
Examining total process to define
What is accomplished
How
Why
Examining parts of process
Value added vs. non-value added activity
Analysis of relationship between production rate, item throughput and process inventory
Little’s Law
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Little’s Law
Can be applied to any process that includes time, inventory and throughput
I = RT, where
I = inventory in the process
R = production processing rate
T = throughput time through process
Dividing by R, the formula becomes T=I/R
Assuming that R is fairly stable, shows that each reduction in inventory is directly related to faster throughput
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUszeJViSjU
Little’s Law
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Develop
Eliminate all unnecessary work
Combine operations wherever possible
Rearrange sequence of operations
Simply wherever possible
Less complex
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Principles of Motion Economy
Principles of motion economy
Locate materials, tools and workplace within working area
Locate work done most frequently within working area and maximum grasp area
Arrange work so motions are balanced
Reduce conditions contributing to operator fatigue
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Human and Environmental Factors
Job design improvements
Job enlargement – expand a worker’s job
Job enrichment – add more meaningful tasks
Job rotation – perform several different jobs
Cross-training
Empowerment and self-directed work teams
Allow the teams to have more responsibility and decision making authority
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Implement and Maintain
Implement the improved actions/changes
Equipment, tooling, information and people available
Dry run
Proper training
Learning curve
Maintain
Be sure new method is being done correctly
Evaluate change to be sure benefits are accomplished
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive
Sample Learning curve
Sample Learning Curve
Over time, speed will increase and errors will decrease
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Introduction to Materials Management, 8e
Chapman, Arnold, Gatewood, and Clive