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Operation Management
Operations management is often used along with production
management in literature on the subject. It is therefore, useful to understand
the nature of operation management. Operation management is understood
as the process whereby resources or inputs are converted into more useful
products. A second reading of the sentence reveals that, there is hardly any
difference between the terms production management and operation
management. But, there are atleast two points of distinction between
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production management and operations management. First, the term
production management is more used for a system where tangible goods are
produced. Whereas, operations management is more frequently used where
various input are transformed into intangible services. Viewed from this
perspective, operations management will cover such service organisation as
banks, airlines, utilities, pollution control agencies, super bazaars,
educational institutions, libraries, consultancy firms and police departments,
in addition, of course, to manufacturing enterprises. The second distinction
relates to the evolution of the subject. Operation management is the term
that is used now days. Production management precedes operations
management in the historical growth of the subject. The two distinctions not
withstanding, the terms production management and operations management
are used interchangeably.
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Scope of Production and Operations Management
The scope of production and operations management is indeed vast.
Commencing with the selection of location, production management covers
such activities as acquisition of land, constructing building, procuring and
installing machinery, purchasing and storing raw materials and converting
them into saleable products.
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• Short new-product lead time
• More inventory turns.
• Shorter manufacturing lead time.
• Higher quality
• Greater Flexibility
• Better customer service
• Reduced wastage
DECISION-MAKING IN PRODUCTION:
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The decisions made by operations managers about the activities of
the production systems tend to fall into three general categories viz;
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therefore it has become necessary to relook at the classification of decision
areas.
Traditionally, the focus of production and operations management
discipline has been the product and the process producing the product.
Hence its orientation is towards technology, capacity, and scheduling and
system maintenance. The focus has been on the operations of the company.
Thus, the traditional view may be termed as being ‘product-centric’ or self-
centric (‘self’ meaning company.
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spatial decisions-decisions regarding the locations and layouts. The former is
related predominantly to the ‘supply’ and ‘timing’ problems. The latter is
related to the ‘timing’ and ‘productivity’ issues. Thus the production
management decisions may be classified as those pertaining to: People,
Supply, Time and Space.
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resulted in two major developments: widespread substitution of machine
power for human power and establishment of the factory system.
The events that took place from 1770 to the 1800s are characterized
by great inventions. The great inventions were eight in number, with six of
them having been conceived in England, one in France and one in the United
States. The eight inventions are-Hargreaves Spinning Jenney, Arkwright’s
Water Frame, Crompton’s Mule, Cartwright’s Power Loom, Watt’s steam
engine, Berthollet’s Chlorine Bleaching Discovery, Mandslay’s Screw-
Cutting Lathe and Eli Whitney’s Interchangeable Manufacture.
As observed from eight inventions, most of them have to do with the
spinning of yarn and weaving of cloth. This is logical from the point of view
that cloth was the principal export commodity of England at that time and
was in short supply owing to the considerable expansion of England’s
colonial empire and its commercial trade.
The availability of machine power greatly facilitated the gathering of
workers in factories that housed the machines. The large number of workers
congregated in the factories, created the need for organizing them in logical
ways to produce goods. The publication of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of
Nations in 1776 advocated the benefits of the division of labour or
specialization of labour, which broke production of goods into small
specialized tasks that were assigned to workers on production lines. Thus,
the factories of late 1700s not only had developed production machinery, but
also ways of planning and controlling the output of workers.
The impact of the industrial Revolution was first felt in England.
From here, it spread to other European countries and to the United States.
The Industrial Revolution advanced further with the development of
the gasoline engine and electricity in the 1800s. Other industries emerged
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and along with them new factories came into being. By the middle of 1800s,
the old cottage system of production had been replaced by the factory
system. As days went by, production capacities expanded, demand for
capital grew and labour became highly dependent on jobs and urbanized. At
the commencement of the 20th century, the one element that was missing
was management-the ability to develop and use the existing facilities to
produce on a large scale to meet massive markets of today.
Scientific Management
The missing input, viz., management, was ably provided by scientific
Management-a philosophy which was propounded by business leaders,
consultants, educators and researchers.
The essential principles of Scientific Management are:
1. Developing a science for each element of a person’s work, which
would replace the old rule of thumb method;
2. Selecting workers scientifically and training and developing them;
3. Cooperating with workers so as to ensure that all the work would be
done according to the principles of science that have been developed;
and
4. Dividing work and responsibility almost equally between
management and workers. Management should take over all the work
for which, it is better fitted than the workers.
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Contributor Life Span Contributions
1. F.W.Taylor 1856-1915 Scientific Management
principles, exception principle,
time study, methods analysis,
standards, planning and
control
2. Frank.B. Gilbreth 1868-1924 Motion Study, methods,
therblings, construction
contracting, consulting
3. Lillian M. Gilbreth 1878-1973 Fatigue studies, human factor
in work, employee selection
and training
4. Henry L. Gantt 1861-1919 Gantt charts, incentive pay
systems, humanistic approach
to labour, and training.
5. Carl G. Barth 1860-1939 Mathematical analysis, slide
rule, feeds and speeds studies,
consulting to automobile
industry
6. Harrington Emerson 1885-1931 Principles of efficiency,
million dollars-a-day savings
in rail roads, methods control
7. Morris L. Cooke 1872-1960 Scientific Management its
application to education and
Government.
Scientific Management became a powerful force as it contributed to
increased efficiency in industrial establishments. This force was so
successfully applied during the US build up of output for World War I and
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after the War, European countries imported Scientific Management methods
to develop their factories.
However, the main thrust of Scientific Management was workers at
the shop floor, foremen, superintendents and lower middle management.
Taylor and his associates concentrated on the shop level because it was here
that management problems of the day were found. What was need was
production and efficiency, which means doing things right and implies
focusing on the details of operations. Scientific Management methods met
the challenge. Later, focus was shifted on developing the overall
organization’s effectiveness, which meant doing the right things.
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1800s and early 1900s. Basic to this management philosophy, was the
assumption that workers were to be given jobs, where they would work
hard and efficiently.
Towards the mid 1900s, a realization dawned on the job-givers
that, workers deserved to be treated as human beings, while on their
respective jobs. The human relations movement began in Illinois with
the work of Elton Mayo, F .• J. Roethlisberger, T.N. Whitehead, and
W.J. Dickson at the Hawthorne, Illinois, plant of the Western Electric
Company in the 1927 -1932 period. The Hawthorne Studies were
initially begun 'by industrial engineers and were aimed at determining
the optimal level of lighting to get- maximum output from workers.
When these studies produced confusing results about the relationship
between physical environment and worker productivity, the researchers
realized that human factors must be affecting productivity. This was
perhaps, the first time that. Researchers and managers alike recognized
that, psychological and sociological factors affected not only employee
motivation but their productivity as well.
These early human relations studies and experiments, soon gave
way to a broad range of research into the behavior of workers in their
work environment. The works and writings of Chester Bernard,
Abraham Maslow, Frederick Herzberg, Douglas McGregor, Peter
Drucker, and others disseminated to industrial managers, a basic
understanding of workers and their attitudes towards their work. Not
that a total understanding of how best to motivate employees has been
obtained, but research is on to discover ways to better utilize the
unutilized energy and capacities of workers.
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Operations Research:
Popularly known by its acronym OR, operations research refers
to the "use of mathematical techniques to solve management problems.
OR has interesting history. At the beginning of World War II,
Great Britain, desperately needed to solve a number of new and
complex problems in warfare. With their survival at stake, the British
formed the first OR teams by pooling the expertise of mathematicians,
physicists, and other Scientists. With such teams, the British were able
to achieve significant technological and tactical breakthroughs.
When the War was over, the applicability of OR to problems in
industry gradually became apparent. New industrial technologies were
being put into use and transportation and communication were
becoming more complicated. These developments brought with them, a
host of problems that could not be solved easily by conventional means.
Increasingly, OR specialists were called in to help the management
come up with answers to these new problems.
Although Scientific Management, human relations and operation
Research have affected the ways that managers in production manage today,
perhaps no other development is an important to these managers as the
growing presence of computers in their jobs.
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enormously. In the beginning computers were used for clerical duties such
as payrolls, billings, inventory transactions and cost reports. As on today,
computers are used as Decisions Support System (DSS), expert systems and
artificial intelligence. Analysts and managers now use computers to analyze
problems and obtain solutions. What would be the shape and use of
computers 10 or 15 years hence, is almost impossible to predict.
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necessary financing using a computer terminal. The order will be relayed to
the factory, where a car meeting the customer’s specific requirements will be
manufactured and readied for delivery in a short time. Obviously, corporate
profitability depends on how best the service component is integrated into
the product.
Conclusion
Economic history and manufacturing history are both important in the
sense that these would suggest some lessons that can be learnt for the future.
History helps us to know the trends and to take a peek at the future. If the
21st century organizations have to manage their operations well, they will
have to try to understand the ‘what and how’ of the productivity
improvements in the past and what led to the various other developments in
the field of production and operations management. The past could tell us a
thing or two about the future if not everything. Looking at the speed with
which technology, economies, production and service systems, and the
society’s values and framework seem to be changing; one may tend to think
that ‘unprecedent’ things have been happening at the dawn of this
millennium. However, there seems to be a common thread running all
through.
Limiting ourselves to history of production or manufacturing, we see
that the effort has always been on increasing productivity through swift and
even flow of materials through the production system. During the Taylor era,
the production activities centered on an individual. Hence, methods had to
be found to standardize the work and get the most out of the individual thus
making the manufacturing flows even and fast. Ford’s assembly line was an
attempt at further improving the speed and the evenness of the flows.
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Thereafter, quality improvements reduced the bottlenecks and the variability
in the processes considerably, thus further facilitating the even and rapid
flow of goods through the production system.
The attempt has always been to reduce the ‘variability’, because
variability could impede the pace and the steadiness of the flow. Earlier,
variability came mostly through the variability in the work of the workers.
However, in the later decades the variability came from the market.
Customers started expecting a variety of products. Manufacturer, therefore,
started grouping like products together. The flows of materials for those
products were, therefore, exposed more easily; this helped in quickly
attending to bottlenecks, if any, and in ensuring a speedy and even flow
through the manufacturing system. Cellular manufacturing or Group
Technology was thus born. Materials Requirement Planning (MRP) and
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) were other efforts at reducing the
variability by integrating various functions within the operations system and
the enterprise as a whole, respectively.
The customer expectation from the manufacturing system increased
further. They started asking for a variety in the products that had to be
supplied ‘just in time’. In order to realize this, the manufacturing company
had to eliminate the ‘unevenness’ or variations within its own plant as also
limit the variations (unevenness) in the inputs that came from outside. This
required the ‘outside system’ to be controlled for evenness inflow despite the
requirements of varied items in varied quantities at varied times. This could
not be done effectively unless the ‘outsider’ became an ‘insider’. Therefore,
the entire perspective of looking at suppliers and other outside associates in
business changed.
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However, it is also extremely important to take adequate cognizance
of further developments in science and technology, the changes in value
systems and in the social structures that are taking place worldwide.
Developments in science and technology give rise to certain social mores
like, for instance, the mobile phones are doing today. Similarly, the changed
social interactions and value systems give rise to changed expectation from
the people. The type of products and services that need to be produced
would, therefore, keep changing. Today a ‘product’ represents the certain
group of characteristics; a ‘service’ represents certain other utility and group
of characteristics. These may under go changes, perhaps fundamental
changes, in days to come. We may see rapid shifts in the lifestyles. So,
whether it is for consumption or for the changed lifestyle, the type of
products demanded and the character of services desired may be quite
different. Production and operations management as a discipline has to
respond to these requirements. That is the challenge.
Bibliography
1. Ashwathappa.K and Shridhara Bhat, Production and Operations
Management, Himalaya Publishing House, Mumbai, Pg. No 1-10
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2. Chary S N, Production And Operations Management, The McGraw-Hill
Companies, New Delhi, Third Edition, Pg. no 1.10,1.13,1.14
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