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Operations Strategy

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Chapter 2 How Operations Strategy fits the Operations Management Philosophy Operations Strategy Operations strategy is the means by which operations implements the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Operations Strategy


1
Operations Strategy
Chapter 2
2
How Operations Strategy fits the Operations
Management Philosophy
Operations As a Competitive Weapon Operations
Strategy Project Management
Process Strategy Process Analysis Process
Performance and Quality Constraint
Management Process Layout Lean Systems
Supply Chain Strategy Location Inventory
Management Forecasting Sales and Operations
Planning Resource Planning Scheduling
3
Operations Strategy
  • Operations strategy is the means by which
    operations implements the firms corporate
    strategy and helps to build a customer-driven
    firm.
  • It links long-term and short-term operations
    decisions to corporate strategy.
  • It is the core of managing processes and value
    chains.

4
Corporate Strategy and Key Operations Management
Decisions
Corporate strategy
5
Customer-DrivenOperations Strategy
  • Corporate strategy views the organization as a
    system of interconnected parts, each working with
    the others to achieve desired goals.
  • Operations Strategy supports the corporate
    strategy and requires continuous cross-functional
    interaction.
  • The operations strategy should be customer driven.

6
Developing a Corporate Strategy
  • Developing a corporate strategy involves three
    considerations
  • Monitoring and adapting to the environment
  • Identifying and developing core competencies
  • Developing the firms core processes
  • Adapting requires environmental scanning to
    monitor trends for opportunities and threats.
  • Core Competencies are the unique resources and
    strengths an organization possesses.

7
Core Competencies
  • Core competencies include
  • A well-trained and flexible Workforce
  • Having well-located flexible Facilities
  • Having Market and Financial Know-How.
  • Expertise in Systems and Technology.
  • The core competencies should determine the firms
    core processes.
  • These can include customer relations, new
    service/product development, order fulfillment,
    and supplier relationships.
  • A firm may have all of these or focus on a subset
    of them, as determined by its core competencies.

8
Global Strategies
  • A global strategy may include buying foreign
    services or parts and entering or expanding
    foreign markets.
  • Two effective global strategies are
  • Strategic Alliances
  • Collaborative efforts
  • Joint ventures
  • Technology licensing
  • Locating abroad

9
Market Analysis
  • A Market Analysis is one key to developing a
    customer-driven strategy, and is accomplished in
    two parts.
  • Market Segmentation, which identifies groups of
    customers with enough in common to warrant
    developing services and/or products for them.
  • Needs Assessment identifies the needs of each
    market segment. Needs include such things as
  • Service or product needs
  • Delivery system needs
  • Volume needs

10
Arriving at the Competitive Priorities
  • Corporate Strategy
  • environmental scanning
  • core competencies
  • core processes
  • global strategies

11
Competitive Priorities
Cost 1. Low-cost operations Quality 2. Top
quality 3. Consistent quality Time 4. Delivery
speed 5. On-time delivery 6. Development
speed Flexibility 7. Customization 8. Variety
9. Volume flexibility
12
Competitive Capabilities
  • The Competitive Capabilities are the cost,
    quality, time and flexibility dimensions of
    competitive priorities that a process or value
    chain actually possesses and is able to deliver.
  • Low Cost means delivering a service or product at
    the lowest possible cost to the satisfaction of
    the customer.

13
Quality as aCompetitive Capability
  • Top Quality Delivering an outstanding service or
    product.
  • Considerable interaction with the customers may
    be required to determine what that means.
  • Consistent Quality Producing services or
    products that meet design specifications on a
    consistent basis.

14
Time as aCompetitive Capability
  • Delivery Speed is quickly filling a customers
    order.
  • Lead Time is the time between receipt of an order
    and filling the order.
  • On-Time Delivery means meeting the delivery time
    promises.
  • Development Speed is quickly introducing a new
    service or product.
  • Time-Based Competition is a strategy that focuses
    on development speed and delivery speed.

15
Flexibility as aCompetitive Capability
  • Customization means satisfying the unique needs
    of each customer by changing the service or
    product designs.
  • Variety involves handling a wide assortment of
    services or products efficiently.
  • Volume Flexibility requires accelerating or
    decelerating the rate of production quickly to
    handle large fluctuations in demand.

16
Order Winners and Order Qualifiers
  • These are criteria used by customers in service
    or product selection.
  • Order Winners are criteria for differentiating
    services or products of one firm from those of
    another.
  • Price, quality, time, flexibility, after sales
    support, reputation, etc.
  • Order Qualifiers are demonstrated levels of
    performance required to do business in a
    particular market segment.

17
Service or Product Development Strategies
  • Product Variety Offering a wide assortment.
  • Design Ease of use and desirable features.
  • Innovation Translate new technology into new
    products.
  • Service Products with services added.
  • Leader Being first to introduce new services
    and/or products.
  • Middle of the Road Wait for the leaders to
    introduce new services and/or products.
  • Laggard Wait to see if the leaders new services
    and/or products catch on in the market.

18
Service Package
  • A Service Package is a collection of goods and
    services provided by a service process to its
    customers. It consists of four features
  • Supporting Facility The physical resources that
    must be in place before a service can be offered.
  • Facilitating Goods The materials purchased or
    consumed by the customer or the items provided by
    the customer to receive a service.
  • Explicit Services The readily observable
    benefits.
  • Implicit Services Psychological benefits.

19
Quality Function Deployment (QDF)
  • Quality Function Deployment (QDF) is a means of
    translating customer requirements into the
    appropriate technical requirements for service or
    product development. Questions it seeks to answer
    are
  • What do our customers want?
  • How well are we doing relative to our
    competition?
  • What technical measures relate to our customers
    needs?
  • What are the relationships between what our
    customers want and the technical measures?
  • How does our service or product performance
    compare to the competition?
  • What are the potential technical trade-offs?

20
House of Quality
Voice of the Engineer
Competitive Analysis
Voice of the Customer
Correlations
Technical Comparison
21
Development Process
22
Concurrent Engineering
  • Concurrent Engineering brings product engineers,
    process engineers, marketers, buyers, information
    specialists, quality specialists, and suppliers
    together to design a product and the processes
    that will meet customer expectations.
  • This is an essential cross-functional effort
    during the service and/or product development
    phase to insure a timely and well-coordinated
    process that brings value to the customer.

23
Corporate Strategy and Key Operations Management
Decisions
Corporate strategy
24
Matching Capabilities to Priorities
  • The table below shows how a credit card division
    matched their capabilities to their priorities
    and uncovered gaps in their operating strategy.
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