Chapter 6 Vocabulary Flashcards

1
Q

The capability of a worker, a machine, a work center, a plant, or an organization to produce output in a time period; looking at output over a certain time period

A

Capacity

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2
Q

Two measures of capacity

A

Theoretical

Rated

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3
Q

The maximum output capability allowing for no adjustments for preventive maintenance, unplanned downtime, or the like; perfect world

A

Theoretical capacity

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4
Q

The long-term, expected output capability of a resource or system; what you actually expect to see

A

Rated capacity

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5
Q

The measures of capacity work for

A

Services and physical products

Ex/ law firm, textile spinning plant, automatic car wash, airline

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6
Q

3 things with capacity planning in services

A

Time
Location
Volatility of Demand

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7
Q

With time and capacity planning in services

A

Services cannot be stored bc service is being consumed at the same time it’s being produced
Need capacity when customers are there

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8
Q

Location and capacity planning in services

A

Located near the customers

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9
Q

Volatility of demand and capacity planning in services

A

Much higher than for manufacturing
Influenced by customer behavior
Smaller time periods (ex: restaurant: per day and warehouse: per week)

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10
Q

Factors that affect capacity

A
Number of lines used 
Number of shifts operating 
Number of temporary workers used 
Number of public storage facilities used 
Product variations on line 
Conformance quality 
Quality improvement
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11
Q

Three capacity strategies

A

Lead
Lag
Match

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12
Q

Looks at the big picture (need capacity, how do you get it?)

A

Capacity strategies

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13
Q

A capacity strategy in which capacity is added in anticipation of demand

A

Lead capacity strategy

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14
Q

A capacity strategy in which capacity is added only after demand has materialized; waiting until you’ve realized demand to expand capacity

A

Lag capacity strategy

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15
Q

A capacity strategy that strikes a balance between the lead and lag capacity strategies by avoiding periods of high under or overutilization; sometimes have excess, sometimes not enough, minimizing risk

A

Match capacity strategy

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16
Q

A collection of firms that typically exists for only a short period. These supply chains are more flexible than traditional supply chains, but they are also less efficient

A

Virtual supply chain

17
Q

The expenses an organization incurs regardless of the level of business activity

A

Fixed costs

18
Q

Expenses directly tied to the level of business activity

A

Variable costs

19
Q

The output level at which two capacity alternatives generate equal costs

A

Indifference point

20
Q

6 Methods of Evaluating Capacity Alternatives

A
Total Cost 
Demand Considerations 
Expected Value 
Decision Trees
Break-Even Analysis 
Learning Curves
21
Q

Developing multiple estimates of demand that capture a range of possibilities is

A

Demand Consideration

22
Q

A calculation that summarizes the expected costs, revenues, or profits of a capacity alternative, based on several demand levels, each of which has a different probability

A

Expected Value

23
Q

A visual tool that decision makers use to evaluate capacity decisions. The main advantage of this is that it enables users to see the inter-relationships between decisions and possible outcomes

A

Decision tree

24
Q

The volume for a business at which total revenues cover total costs

A

Break-even point

25
Q

Suggests that productivity levels can improve at a predictable rate as people and even systems “learn” to do tasks more efficiently. States that for every doubling of cumulative output, there is a set percentage reduction in the amount of inputs required

A

Learning curve theory

26
Q

As a production line, you’re held back by the weakest link refers to

A

Theory of Constraints

27
Q

An approach to visualizing and managing capacity which recognizes that nearly all products and services are created through a series of linked processes, and in every case, there is at least one process step that limits throughout for the entire chain

A

Theory of Constraints

28
Q

The process step (or steps) that limits throughout got an entire process chain; determines the capacity/output for entire system

A

Constraint

29
Q

Five Steps to Manage a Constraint

A

Identify the constraint
Exploit the constraint
Subordinate everything to the constraint
Elevate the constraint
Find the new constraint and repeat the steps

30
Q

Helps managers evaluate the relationship between capacity decisions and important performance issues such as waiting times and line lengths

A

Waiting line theory

31
Q

Rules for determine which customer, job, or product is processed next in a waiting line environment

A

Priority rules

32
Q

In operations and supply chain environments that must deal with random demand and variable processing times, it is virtually impossible to

A

Achieve very high capacity utilization levels and still provide acceptable customer service

33
Q

Littles Law

A

I(inventory)=R(throughput rate)* T(throughput time)