Click here for tutorial
MGT655 QUESTIONS 1, 4, 10, 11, 13 & 18
18. I-mart is a discount optical shop that can fi ll most
prescription orders in around 1 hour. The management is analyzing the
processes at the store. There currently is one person assigned to each
task below. The optometrist assigned to task B takes an hour off for
lunch and the other employees work the entire day.
Task Time
A. Greet/register the patient 2 minutes/patient
B. Optometrist conducts eye exam 25 minutes/patient
C. Frame/lenses selection 20 minutes/patient
D. Glasses made (process can run 6 pairs of
glasses at the same time) 60 minutes/patient
E. Final fi tting 5 minutes/patient
For a typical 10-hour retail day (10 a.m.–8 p.m.), the manager would like to calculate the following:
a. What is the current maximum output of the process per day (assuming every patient requires glasses)?
b. If another person were added, where would be the logical place?
c. What effect would a mail order lab (where the glasses are made off-site and returned in 5–7 days) have on the process?
Click here for tutorial
MGT655 QUESTIONS 1, 4, 10, 11, 13 & 18
1. A manufacturing company has a small production line dedicated to
the production of a particular product. The line has four stations in
serial. Inputs arrive at station 1 and the output from station 1 becomes
the input to station 2. The output from station 2 is the input to
station 3 and so on. The output from station 4 is the fi nished product.
Station 1 can process 2,700 units per month, station 2 can process
2,500/month, station 3 can process 2,300/month, and station 4 can process 2,100/month. What station sets
the maximum possible output from this system? What is that maximum
output number?
4. You are in a line at the bank drive-through and 10 cars are in
front of you. You estimate that the clerk is taking about five minutes
per car to serve. How long do you expect to wait in line?
10. An enterprising student has set up an internship clearinghouse
for business students. Each student who uses the service fi lls out a
form and lists up to 10 companies that he or she would like to have
contacted. The clearinghouse has a choice of two methods to use for
processing the forms. The traditional method requires about 20 minutes
to review the form and arrange the information in the proper order for
processing. Once this setup is done, it takes only two minutes per
company requested to complete the processing. The other alternative uses
an optical scan/retrieve system, which takes only a minute to prepare
but requires fi ve
minutes per company for completing the processing. If it costs about the same amount per minute for processing with either of the two methods, when should each be used?
minutes per company for completing the processing. If it costs about the same amount per minute for processing with either of the two methods, when should each be used?
11. Rockness Recycling refurbishes rundown business students. The
process uses a moving belt, which carries each student through the fi ve
steps of the process in sequence. The five steps are as follows:
Time Required
Step Description per Student
1 Unpack and place on belt 1.0 minute
2 Strip off bad habits 1.5 minutes
3 Scrub and clean mind 0.8 minute
4 Insert modern methods 1.0 minute
5 Polish and pack 1.2 minutes
One faculty member is assigned to each of these steps. Faculty members work a 40-hour week and rotate jobs each week. Mr. Rockness has been working on a contract from General Eclectic, which requires delivery of 2,000 refurbished students per week. A representative of the human resources department has just called complaining that the company hasn’t been receiving the agreed-upon number of students. A check of finished goods inventory by Mr. Rockness reveals that there is no stock left. What is going on?
Time Required
Step Description per Student
1 Unpack and place on belt 1.0 minute
2 Strip off bad habits 1.5 minutes
3 Scrub and clean mind 0.8 minute
4 Insert modern methods 1.0 minute
5 Polish and pack 1.2 minutes
One faculty member is assigned to each of these steps. Faculty members work a 40-hour week and rotate jobs each week. Mr. Rockness has been working on a contract from General Eclectic, which requires delivery of 2,000 refurbished students per week. A representative of the human resources department has just called complaining that the company hasn’t been receiving the agreed-upon number of students. A check of finished goods inventory by Mr. Rockness reveals that there is no stock left. What is going on?
13. A local market research fi rm has just won a contract for
several thousand small projects involving data gathering and statistical
analysis. In the past, the fi rm has assigned each project to a single
member of its highly trained professional staff. This person would both
gather and analyze the data. Using this approach, an experienced person
can complete an average of 10 such projects in an eight-hour day. The
firm’s management is thinking of assigning two people to each project in
order to allow them to specialize and become more effi cient. The
process would require the data gatherer to fi ll out a matrix on the
computer, check it, and transmit it to the statistical analysis program
for the analyst to complete. Data can be gathered on one project while
the analysis is being completed on another, but the analysis must be
complete before the statistical analysis program can accept the new
data. After some practice, the new process can be completed with a
standard time of 20 minutes for the data gathering and 30 minutes for
the analysis.
a. What is the production (output per hour) for each alternative? What is the productivity (output per labor hour)?
b. How long would it take to complete 1,000 projects with each alternative? What would be the labor content (total number of labor hours) for 1,000 projects for each alternative?
a. What is the production (output per hour) for each alternative? What is the productivity (output per labor hour)?
b. How long would it take to complete 1,000 projects with each alternative? What would be the labor content (total number of labor hours) for 1,000 projects for each alternative?
Task Time
A. Greet/register the patient 2 minutes/patient
B. Optometrist conducts eye exam 25 minutes/patient
C. Frame/lenses selection 20 minutes/patient
D. Glasses made (process can run 6 pairs of
glasses at the same time) 60 minutes/patient
E. Final fi tting 5 minutes/patient
For a typical 10-hour retail day (10 a.m.–8 p.m.), the manager would like to calculate the following:
a. What is the current maximum output of the process per day (assuming every patient requires glasses)?
b. If another person were added, where would be the logical place?
c. What effect would a mail order lab (where the glasses are made off-site and returned in 5–7 days) have on the process?
Click here for tutorial
No comments:
Post a Comment