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Subassemblies The Americas Business Game

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The Deluxe models require more ... would be 5,200 Basic and 2,700 Deluxe washers. Group 1 Constraint ... was created by Prof. Globus for his Deluxe washers. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Subassemblies The Americas Business Game


1
Subassemblies The Americas Business Game
2
Prof. Nathan Globus Shows You How
  • Prof. Globus will take you through the factorys
    use of its Subassembly raw materials.
  • His examples will use the cost information
    associated with the games first business quarter.

3
What Prof. Globus Will Cover
  • Ordering Subassemblies
  • Grade mix effects on the products physical
    quality
  • The production possibilities curve for given
    inventory levels
  • Subassembly cost contribution to the units
    manufacturing cost
  • Minimizing Subassembly costs
  • Targeting the products physical quality
  • The accounting ramifications of Subassembly
    operations

4
Ordering Subassemblies
  • Production raw material needs must be ordered at
    least one quarter in advance.
  • Three different A, B and C Grades of
    Subassemblies can be ordered.
  • Subassemblies are ordered in lots of 100.
  • Each washing machine needs Subassemblies from
    both Groups.
  • Production stops when the factory runs out of any
    one of the Grades from any of the two Groups.

5
Washing Machine Subassembly Requirements
  • Each washer requires a different number of
    components regardless of its grade.
  • The Deluxe models require more subassemblies.
  • Your firm must anticipate the total number of
    Subassemblies needed for future production needs.

6
Subassembly Proportions
  • Each washing machines Subassembly component mix.

7
A Subassembly Order
  • The firm is ordering 31,000 Group 1 Grade A
    Subassemblies to be available in Q2YR02.
  • 3,500 Group 2 Grade C Subassemblies have been
    also ordered for the same quarter.
  • Prof. Globus is also ordering other Subassemblies
    from Group 1 and Group 2.

8
Resulting Grade Proportions
  • The proportions of each Grade in his order are
    biased towards Grade B.
  • This should result in a middle grade product
    based on the Subassembly mix ordered.

9
Grade Mix Effects On Physical Quality
  • Each Grade makes a particular contribution to the
    products quality.
  • Each Grade has its own price tag or cost which
    may change during the game.

10
Drawing Subassembly Inventories
  • Prof. Globus calculated the runs Subassembly
    requirements to be the following for his
    production run of 2,500 Basic washers and 4,850
    Deluxe models.

11
Group and Grade Proportions Drawn
  • The Subassemblies are drawn from inventory in the
    proportions they exist at the quarters
    beginning.
  • The amounts shown below would be pulled from the
    Subassembly inventory for the quarters run.

12
Quality Resulting From Subassembly Order
  • The Subassembly order made by this firm would
    produce Basic washers at a Quality Level of 8.47.

13
The Production Possibilities Curve
  • Production constraints
  • The amount of Subassemblies available at the
    beginning of the quarter.
  • The number of workers who show up for work.
  • The plants absolute size in labor hour capacity.
  • Prof. Globus will deal here only with the
    production possibilities associated with the
    quarters beginning inventory.

14
A Linear Programming Problem
  • Prof. Globus wants to maximize the absolute
    number of washers that can be made from the
    Subassembly inventory available.
  • Trade-offs must be made between the number of
    Basic and Deluxe washers that can be obtained
    from the inventory given the different amount of
    Subassemblies required by each set.
  • A production matrix was calculated. This matrix
    indicates the number of each model that could be
    produced from the inventories available.

15
Using the Graphic Method
  • The plants operation is constrained by the lack
    of Group 1 Subassemblies.
  • The Production Possibilities Curve shows that
    about 3,600 Basic models could be made along with
    4,000 Deluxe washers.
  • Another possibility would be 5,200 Basic and
    2,700 Deluxe washers.

Group 1 Constraint
16
Subassembly Unit Manufacturing Cost
  • Subassemblies are purchased in 100-unit lots.
  • The shipping charge for the Subassemblies is not
    included in the Subassemblies landed cost.
  • Prof. Globus converted the lot prices into unit
    prices for computational convenience.

17
Raw Materials Cost for Run
  • The inventory Prof. Globus has on hand generated
    the following Subassembly costs per unit.

18
Targeting The Products Physical Quality
  • The professor wants to have products of different
    quality in his markets.
  • He will target a 6.45 Quality Level for Brazil.
  • His Quality Level target for the United States is
    9.14.
  • Mexican sets will be targeted at 7.80 to insure
    he can enter a competitive bid for Fast Wash
    sales.

19
An Algebraic Solution
  • Algebra is very helpful here as Prof. Globus is
    solving for x, which is the desired Quality
    Level.
  • The question is what proportions of the three
    Grades of each Group of Subassemblies produces
    the desired Quality Level. In this example the
    desired Quality Level is 8.67.
  • Given the quality-inducing power of each Grade
    the formula is
  • 10.0x 7.5x 5.0x Desired Quality Level
  • Example
  • 10.0x 7.5x 5.0x 8.67
  • 22.5x 8.67
  • x .385

20
Subassembly Inventory Proportions
  • With x now known the proportions and absolute
    number of Subassembly Grades that should be
    ordered to produce the desired Quality Level can
    be calculated. They would be the following for
    the examples Quality Level of 8.67.
  • These proportions, however, do not produce the
    least-costly way to obtain product quality within
    the Grades of Subassemblies on the market.

21
Least-Costly Subassembly Sets
  • Prof. Globus wants to now produce washers at a
    targeted quality level at the lowest possible
    cost.
  • He created tables that traded low cost Grade C
    Subassemblies for higher costing B and A Grade
    Subassemblies.

22
Choosing the Grade Mix
  • If a Quality Index of 7.75 was desired the Grade
    mix for both Groups would be 90.0 Grade B and
    10.0 Grade A.
  • The unit cost of this Subassembly mix would be
    39.1275. This is the lowest cost mix for
    delivering a 7.75 Quality Index for Basic models.
  • A similar table was created by Prof. Globus for
    his Deluxe washers.

23
Quality/Subassembly Cost Trade-Offs
  • This graph indicates the relationship between
    Group 1s Subassembly costs and the Quality Index
    level obtained.
  • A sharp break in the cost of obtaining higher
    quality occurs when Grade A materials begin to
    replace Grade C materials.
  • The linear trend can be defined as
  • y 1.0926x - 4.362
  • Similar graphs could be created for the three
    remaining Group/Set sizes.

24
Achieving Optimality
  • Prof. Globus would like to have the perfect
    combination of Subassemblies in his inventory.
    However this is impossible and should not be
    attempted because
  • Ideal Quality Levels differ from one country to
    another and between the two products. Unless a
    plant is dedicated to making only one product for
    one country the Quality Level will always be
    imperfect.
  • It takes many quarters to significantly change
    the inventory of Subassemblies used each quarter.
  • The markets needs for quality change faster than
    the company can change its Subassembly mix.
  • The firms product mix can change very quickly
    thereby putting the Subassembly Grade mix out of
    sync with the current, ideal product mix.
  • To resolve this problem the Professor tries to
    assemble a Subassembly Grade mix that best serves
    the average long-term product mix needs of the
    firm. This requires Strategic Planning.

25
Accounting Ramifications
  • Prof. Globus will now trace how his Subassembly
    decision set impacted his firms financial
    operations as reported in the games Income
    Statement, Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
    operations.
  • He will show you the accounting results for only
    the decisions immediate quarter.

26
The Accounting Changes
  • The revenues produced by the Subassembly purchase
    will be realized primarily in the following
    quarter.

27
The End
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