3.4.1 Flashcards
What is operations?
the function of a business that is concerned with providing customers with a product that they want in a timely, effective, efficient and profitable way. Operations is about the actual production of the good or service sold by a business.
The importance of operations:
Effectively managing operations allows a business to:
- control costs of production
- add value to its products
- guarantee the right level of service
- guarantee the right level of quality
- adapt to the needs of customers
- provide itself with ‘green’ credentials
- meet the demand for its products and services.
Operations management is the key factor in the transformational process by which a business
creates its products and services. Therefore, operations is the key to adding value to what a business does.
Operational objectives
- Costs - the operations department must be able to control the costs of production in order to maximise profit margins.
- Quality - the operations department is responsible for setting quality standards and ensuring these specifications are met, ensuring the product or service is fit for purpose.
- Environmental objectives - the production process can cause many negative externalities, such as pollution. Businesses will set targets on a number of environmental factors such as recycling and waste disposal.
- Dependability - businesses cannot afford to let their customers down.
Those that do tend to lose loyalty and repeat purchases. Dependability can be the key factor by which a customer chooses its supplier, especially in industrial markets - Speed of response and flexibility - opportunities and sales can be lost if a business cannot meet order volumes in a specific time frame. Operations is also responsible for ensuring the product is suitably flexible to meet the needs of different customers.
Internal influences on operational objectives
- Employee skills - these may determine objectives, such as the level of quality.
- Nature of the product - minimising cost may be very important for a product sold for £1.99.
External influences on operational objectives
- Legal / political factors - such as health and safety legislation and industry regulation.
- Economic factors - operations must be able to adapt to changing levels of demand in the market.
- Social factors - such as consumers continue to expect more personalisation of the products they buy.
- Technological factors - technology drives all operational decisions, in particular new product development and processes of manufacture and distribution.
4V of operations
Can be used to analyse key issues in the operational decisions of any business.
- Volume
- Variety
- Visibility
- Variability