M7 Flashcards
(34 cards)
The process of making sure that demand and supply plans are in balance, from the aggregate level down to the short-term scheduling level
Operations Planning and Scheduling
A plan of future aggregate resource levels so that supply is in balance with demand. It states a company’s or department’s production rates, workforce levels, and inventory holdings that are consistent with demand forecasts and capacity constraints. This term is a time-phased plan, meaning that it is projected for several time periods (such as months or quarters) into the future.
Sales and Operations Plan (S&OP)
Another term for the sales and operations plan is known as
Aggregate Plan
A sales and operations plan for a manufacturing firm that centers on production rates and inventory holdings.
Production Plan
A sales and operations plan for a service firm, which centers on staffing and on other human resource–related factors.
Staffing Plan
An intermediate step in the planning process that lies between S&OP and scheduling. It determines requirements for materials and other resources on a more detailed level than the S&OP. It is covered in the next chapter
Resource Plan
A detailed plan that allocates resources over shorter time horizons to accomplish specific tasks
Schedule
What level( 1-3) do sales and operations plans exist in?
Level 1
Companies perform aggregation along three dimensions. What are they?
Services or products
Workforce
Time
A group of customers, services, or products that have similar demand requirements and common process, workforce, and materials requirements is called a
Product Family
A projected statement of income, costs, and profits.
Business Plan
A plan for financial assessment used by a nonprofit service organization.
Annual Plan
What can be used to absorb uneven rates of demand and supply? Think seasonal businesses that sell a majority of their products a few months out of the year
Anticipation Inventory
How management adjusts workforce levels by hiring or laying off employees. May be seasonal/based off demand think splash
Workforce Adjustment
An alternative to a workforce adjustment is a change in workforce utilization involving overtime and undertime is known as
Workforce Utilization
The time that employees work that is longer than the regular workday or workweek for which they receive additional pay.
Overtime
The situation that occurs when employees do not have enough work for the regular-time workday or workweek.
Undertime
When employees are kept on the payroll rather than being laid off is known as
Paid Undertime
What is another option than undertime, typically someone who is paid for the hours and days they’ve worked not salary
Part-Time Workers
Who can be used to overcome short-term capacity shortages, such as during peaks of the season or business cycle. They can supply services, make components and subassemblies, or even assemble an entire product.
Subcontractors
A manufacturer can shut down during an annual lull in sales, leaving a skeleton crew to cover operations and perform maintenance. Hospital employees might be encouraged to take all or part of their allowed vacation time during slack periods this is known as
Vacation Schedules
A strategy that involves hiring and laying off employees to match the demand forecast.
Chase Strategy
What are the drawbacks of the chase strategy?
The drawbacks are the expense of continually adjusting workforce levels, the potential alienation of the workforce, and the loss of productivity and quality because of constant changes in the workforce.
A strategy that keeps the workforce constant, but varies its utilization via overtime, undertime, and vacation planning to match the demand forecast.
Level Strategy