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Resource planningppt @ DOMS

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Resource planningppt @ DOMS
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Resource Planning
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Page 1: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Resource Planning

Page 2: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Lecture Outline

• Material Requirements Planning (MRP)• Capacity Requirements Planning (CRP)• Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)• Customer Relationship Management (CRM)• Supply Chain Management (SCM)• Product Lifecycle Management (PLM)

15-2

Page 3: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

ResourcePlanning for Manufacturing

15-3

Page 4: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Material Requirements Planning (MRP)

• Computerized inventory control and production planning system

• When to use MRP?• Dependent demand items• Discrete demand items• Complex products• Job shop production• Assemble-to-order environments

15-4

Page 5: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Demand Characteristics

15-5

1 2 3 4 5Week

400 –

300 –

200 –

100 –No

. o

f ta

ble

s

Continuous demand

M T W Th F M T W Th F

400 –

300 –

200 –

100 –No

. o

f ta

ble

s

Discrete demand

Independent demand

100 tables

Dependent demand

100 x 1 = 100 tabletops

100 x 4 = 400 table legs

Page 6: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Material Requirements

Planning

15-6

Materialrequirements

planning

Planned order

releases

Work orders

Purchase orders

Rescheduling notices

Itemmaster

file

Productstructure

file

Master production schedule

Page 7: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

MRP Inputs and Outputs

Inputs Master production

schedule Product structure file Item master file

Outputs Planned order releases

Work orders Purchase orders Rescheduling notices

15-7

Page 8: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Master Production Schedule

• Drives MRP process with a schedule of finished products

• Quantities represent production not demand• Quantities may consist of a combination of

customer orders and demand forecasts• Quantities represent what needs to be

produced, not what can be produced• Quantities represent end items that may or may

not be finished products

15-8

Page 9: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-9

Master Production Schedule

PERIODMPS ITEM 1 2 3 4 5

Pencil Case 125 125 125 125 125Clipboard 85 95 120 100 100Lapboard 75 120 47 20 17Lapdesk 0 50 0 50 0

Page 10: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Product Structure File

15-10

Page 11: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Product Structure

15-11

Top clip (1) Bottom clip (1)

Pivot (1) Spring (1)

Rivets (2)Finished clipboard Pressboard (1)

Clipboard

Page 12: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Product Structure Tree

15-12

Clipboard Level 0

Level 1

Level 2Spring

(1)Bottom Clip

(1)Top Clip

(1)Pivot (1)

Rivets (2)

Clip Ass’y (1)

Pressboard (1)

Page 13: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Multilevel Indented BOM

15-13

0 - - - -Clipboard ea 1- 1 - - -Clip Assembly ea 1- - 2 - -Top Clip ea 1- - 2 - -Bottom Clip ea 1- - 2 - - Pivot ea 1- - 2 - - Spring ea 1- 1 - - - Rivet ea 2- 1 - - -Press Board ea 1

LEVEL ITEM UNIT OF MEASURE QUANTITY

Page 14: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Specialized BOMs

• Phantom bills• Transient subassemblies• Never stocked• Immediately consumed in next stage

• K-bills• Group small, loose parts under pseudo-item number• Reduces paperwork, processing time, and file space

15-14

Page 15: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Specialized BOMs

• Modular bills• Product assembled from major subassemblies and

customer options• Modular bill kept for each major subassembly• Simplifies forecasting and planning• X10 automobile example

• 3 x 8 x 3 x 8 x 4 = 2,304 configurations• 3 + 8 + 3 + 8 + 4 = 26 modular bills

15-15

Page 16: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Modular BOMs

15-16

4-Cylinder (.40) Bright red (.10) Leather (.20) Grey (.10) Sports coupe (.20)

6-Cylinder (.50) White linen (.10) Tweed (.40) Light blue (.10) Two-door (.20)

8-Cylinder (.10) Sulphur yellow (.10) Plush (.40) Rose (.10) Four-door (.30)

Neon orange (.10) Off-white (.20) Station wagon (.30)

Metallic blue (.10) Cool green (.10)

Emerald green (.10) Black (.20)

Jet black (.20) Brown (.10)

Champagne (.20) B/W checked (.10)

X10Automobile

Engines Exterior color Interior Interior color Body(1 of 3) (1 of 8) (1 of 3) (1 of 8) (1 of 4)

Page 17: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Time-phased Bills

• An assembly chart shown against a time scale

15-17

Page 18: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Time-phased Bills

• Forward scheduling• start at today‘s date and schedule forward to determine the

earliest date the job can be finished. If each item takes one period to complete, the clipboards can be finished in three periods

• Backward scheduling• start at the due date and schedule backwards to determine

when to begin work. If an order for clipboards is due by period three, we should start production now

15-18

Page 19: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Item Master File

15-19

DESCRIPTION INVENTORY POLICY

Item PressboardLead time 1

Item no. 7341Annual demand 5000

Item type PurchHolding cost 1

Product/sales class CompOrdering/setup cost 50

Value class B Safety stock 0

Buyer/planner RSRReorder point 39

Vendor/drawing 07142 EOQ 316

Phantom code NMinimum order qty 100

Unit price/cost 1.25Maximum order qty 500

Pegging YMultiple order qty 1

LLC 1 Policy code 3

Page 20: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-20

Item Master File

On hand 150YTD usage/sales 1100Location W142MTD usage/sales 75On order 100YTD receipts 1200Allocated 75 MTD receipts 0Cycle 3 Last receipt 8/25Last count 9/5 Last issue 10/5Difference -2

Cost acct. 00754Routing 00326

Engr 07142

PHYSICAL INVENTORY USAGE/SALES

CODES

Page 21: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

MRP Processes

• Exploding the bill of material

• Netting out the inventory

• Netting• the process of subtracting on-hand quantities and

scheduled receipts from gross requirements to produce net requirements

• Lot sizing• determining the quantities in which items are usually made or

purchased

• Time-phasing requirements

15-21

Page 22: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-22

MRP Matrix

Page 23: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

MRP

15-23

Master Production Schedule

1 2 3 4 5

Clipboard 85 95 120 100 100Lapdesk 0 60 0 60 0

Item Master File

CLIPBOARD LAPDESK PRESSBOARDOn hand 25 20 150On order 175 (Period 1) 0 0 (sch receipt)LLC 0 0 1Lot size L4L Mult 50 Min 100Lead time 1 1 1

Page 24: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

MRP

15-24

Product Structure Record

Clipboard

Lapdesk

Pressboard(2)

Trim(3’)

Beanbag(1)

Glue(4 oz)

Level 0

Level 0

Pressboard(1)

Clip Ass’y(1)

Rivets(2) Level 1

Level 1

Page 25: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-25

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 85 95 120 100 100

Scheduled Receipts 175

Projected on Hand 25

Net Requirements

Planned Order Receipts

Planned Order Releases

MRP - 1

Page 26: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-26

MRP - 2

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 85 95 120 100 100

Scheduled Receipts 175

Projected on Hand 25 115

Net Requirements 0

Planned Order Receipts

Planned Order Releases

(25 + 175) = 200 units available(200 - 85) = 115 on hand at the end of Period 1

Page 27: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-27

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 85 95 120 100 100

Scheduled Receipts 175

Projected on Hand 25 115 20

Net Requirements 0 0

Planned Order Receipts

Planned Order Releases

115 units available(115 - 85) = 20 on hand at the end of Period 2

MRP - 3

Page 28: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-28

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 85 95 120 100 100

Scheduled Receipts 175

Projected on Hand 25 115 20 0

Net Requirements 0 0 100

Planned Order Receipts 100

Planned Order Releases 100

20 units available(20 - 120) = -100 — 100 additional Clipboards are requiredOrder must be placed in Period 2 to be received in Period 3

MRP - 4

Page 29: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-29

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 85 95 120 100 100

Scheduled Receipts 175

Projected on Hand 25 115 20 0 0 0

Net Requirements 0 0 100 100 100

Planned Order Receipts 100 100 100

Planned Order Releases 100 100 100

Following the same logic Gross Requirements in Periods 4 and 5 develop Net Requirements, Planned Order Receipts, and Planned Order Releases

MRP - 5

Page 30: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-30

ITEM: LAPDESK LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MULT 50 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 0 60 0 60 0

Scheduled Receipts

Projected on Hand 20

Net Requirements

Planned Order Receipts

Planned Order Releases

MRP - 6

Page 31: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-31

ITEM: LAPDESK LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MULT 50 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 0 60 0 60 0

Scheduled Receipts

Projected on Hand 20 20 10 10 0 0

Net Requirements 0 40 50

Planned Order Receipts 50 50

Planned Order Releases 50 50

Following the same logic, the Lapdesk MRP matrix is completed as shown

MRP - 7

Page 32: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-32

ITEM: PRESSBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MIN 100 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross RequirementsScheduled ReceiptsProjected on Hand 150Net RequirementsPlanned Order ReceiptsPlanned Order Releases

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 100 100 100

ITEM: LAPDESK LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MULT 50 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 50 50

MRP - 8

Page 33: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-33

ITEM: PRESSBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MIN 100 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 100 100 200 100 0Scheduled ReceiptsProjected on Hand 150Net RequirementsPlanned Order ReceiptsPlanned Order Releases

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 100 100 100

ITEM: LAPDESK LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MULT 50 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 50 50

MRP – 9

x1 x1x1

x2 x2

Page 34: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-34

ITEM: PRESSBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MIN 100 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Gross Requirements 100 100 200 100 0Scheduled ReceiptsProjected on Hand 150 50 50 0 0Net Requirements 50 150 100Planned Order Receipts 100 150 100Planned Order Releases 100 150 100

ITEM: CLIPBOARD LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: L4L LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 100 100 100

ITEM: LAPDESK LLC: 0 PERIOD

LOT SIZE: MULT 50 LT: 1 1 2 3 4 5

Planned Order Releases 50 50

MRP – 10

x1 x1x1

x2 x2

Page 35: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-35

MRP - 11

PERIOD

ITEM 1 2 3 4 5

Clipboard 100 100 100

Lapdesk 50 50

Pressboard 100 150 100

Planned Order Report

Page 36: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Lot Sizing in MRP Systems

• Lot-for-lot ordering policy

• Fixed-size lot ordering policy• Minimum order quantities

• Maximum order quantities

• Multiple order quantities

• Economic order quantity

• Periodic order quantity

15-36

Page 37: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Advanced Lot Sizing Rules: L4L

15-37

Total cost of L4L = (4 X $60) + (0 X $1) = $240

Page 38: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Advanced Lot Sizing Rules: EOQ

15-38

2(30)(6060

1EOQ minimum order quantity

Total cost of EOQ = (2 X $60) + [(10 + 50 + 40) X $1)] = $220

Page 39: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Advanced Lot Sizing Rules: POQ

15-39

/ 60 / 30 2POQ Q d periods worth of requirements

Total cost of POQ = (2 X $60) + [(20 + 40) X $1] = $180

Page 40: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Planned Order Report

15-40

Item #2740 Date 9 - 25 - 05On hand 100 Lead time 2 weeksOn order 200 Lot size 200Allocated 50 Safety stock 50

SCHEDULED PROJECTEDDATE ORDER NO. GROSS REQS. RECEIPTS ON HAND ACTION

509-26 AL 4416 25 259-30 AL 4174 25 010-01 GR 6470 50 - 5010-08 SR 7542 200 150Expedite SR 10-0110-10 CO 4471 75 7510-15 GR 6471 50 2510-23 GR 6471 25 010-27 GR 6473 50 - 50Release PO 10-13

Key: AL= allocated WO= work orderCO= customer order SR= scheduled receiptPO= purchase order GR= gross requirement

Page 41: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

MRP Action Report

15-41

ITEM DATE ORDER NO. QTY. ACTION

#2740 10-08 7542 200Expedite SR 10-01

#3616 10-09 Move forward PO 10-07

#2412 10-10 Move forward PO 10-05

#3427 10-15 Move backward PO 10-25

#2516 10-20 7648 100De-expedite SR 10-30

#2740 10-27 200Release PO 10-13

#3666 10-31 50Release WO 10-24

Current date 9-25-08

Page 42: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Capacity Requirements Planning (CRP)

• Creates a load profile

• Identifies under-loads and over-loads

• Inputs• Planned order releases

• Routing file

• Open orders file

15-42

Page 43: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

CRP

15-43

MRP plannedorder

releases

Routingfile

Capacityrequirements

planning

Openorders

file

Load profile foreach process

Page 44: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Calculating Capacity

• Maximum capability to produce• Rated Capacity

• Theoretical output that could be attained if a process were operating at full speed without interruption, exceptions, or downtime

• Effective Capacity• Takes into account the efficiency with which a particular product

or customer can be processed and the utilization of the scheduled hours or work

15-44

Effective Daily Capacity = (no. of machines or workers) x (hours per shift) x (no. of shifts) x (utilization) x ( efficiency)

Page 45: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Calculating Capacity

• Utilization• Percent of available time spent working

• Efficiency• How well a machine or worker performs compared to

a standard output level

• Load• Standard hours of work assigned to a facility

• Load Percent• Ratio of load to capacity

15-45

Load Percent = x 100%load

capacity

Page 46: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

• Graphical comparison of load versus capacity

• Leveling underloaded conditions:• Acquire more work

• Pull work ahead that is scheduled for later time periods

• Reduce normal capacity

• Load leveling• Process of balancing underloads and overloads

15-46

Load Profiles

Page 47: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Reducing Over-load Conditions

• Eliminate unnecessary requirements• Reroute jobs to alternative machines, workers,

or work centers• Split lots between two or more machines• Increase normal capacity• Subcontract• Increase efficiency of the operation• Push work back to later time periods• Revise master schedule

15-47

Page 48: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Copy Courier• Two high-speed copiers that can be operated by

one operator.• 2 shifts per day• 8 hours/shift , 5 days/week. • No breaks during the day• 30 minutes for lunch or dinner• Machine service time = 30 minutes at the beginning

of each shift• Machine efficiency = 90%.• Capacity

• 2 copiers * 2 shifts * 8 hrs/day * 7/8 utilization * .90 efficiency = 1512 minutes/day

15-48

Page 49: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Copy Courier

Job No. of Setup Time Run Time

Copies (min) (min/unit)

10500 5.2 0.08

201000 10.6 0.10

305000 3.4 0.12

404500 11.2 0.14

502000 15.3 0.10

15-49

Page 50: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Load Calculations

Job Setup + Run x No. CopiesJob Time

10 5.2 + (500 X 0.08) = 45.20

20 10.6 + (1000 X 0.10) = 110.60

30 3.4 + (5000 X 0.12) = 603.40

40 11.2 + (4500 X 0.14) = 641.20

50 15.3 + (2000 X 0.10) = 215.30

1,615.70 min

15-50

Page 51: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Loading

Capacity

2 copiers * 2 shifts * 8 hrs/day * 7/8 utilization * .90 efficiency

= 1512 minutes/day

Load percent = 1615.70/1512 = 1.068 X 100% = 106.8%

Overloaded by 6.8%.

Extends working day by approximately 36 minutes

Load percent = 99%.

Increase efficiency to 97%.

15-51

Page 52: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-52

Initial Load ProfileH

ours

of

capa

city

1 2 3 4 5 6Time (weeks)

Normalcapacity

120 –

110 –

100 –

90 –

80 –

70 –

60 –

50 –

40 –

30 –

20 –

10 –

0 –

Page 53: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

15-53

Adjusted Load ProfileH

ours

of

capa

city

1 2 3 4 5 6Time (weeks)

Normalcapacity

120 –

110 –

100 –

90 –

80 –

70 –

60 –

50 –

40 –

30 –

20 –

10 –

0 –

Pull aheadPush back

Push backOvertime

Work an

extra shift

Page 54: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Relaxing MRP Assumptions

• Material is not always the most constraining resource

• Lead times can vary• Not every transaction needs to be recorded• Shop floor may require a more sophisticated

scheduling system• Scheduling in advance may not be

appropriate for on-demand production.

15-54

Page 55: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)

• Software that organizes and manages a company’s business processes by• sharing information across functional areas

• integrating business processes

• facilitating customer interaction

• providing benefit to global companies

15-55

Page 56: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Organizational Data Flows

15-56

Page 57: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

ERP’s Central Database

15-57Copyright 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Page 58: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Selected Enterprise Software Vendors

15-58

Page 59: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

ERP Implementation

• Analyze business processes• Choose modules to implement

• Which processes have the biggest impact on customer relations?

• Which process would benefit the most from integration?• Which processes should be standardized?

• Align level of sophistication• Finalize delivery and access• Link with external partners

15-59

Page 60: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

• Software that• Plans and executes business processes

• Involves customer interaction

• Changes focus from managing products to managing customers

• Analyzes point-of-sale data for patterns used to predict future behavior

15-60

Page 61: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Supply Chain Management

• Software that plans and executes business processes related to supply chains

• Includes• Supply chain planning

• Supply chain execution

• Supplier relationship management

• Distinctions between ERP and SCM are becoming increasingly blurred

15-61

Page 62: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Product Lifecycle Management (PLM)

• Software that• Incorporates new product design and

development and product life cycle management

• Integrates customers and suppliers in the design process though the entire product life cycle

15-62

Page 63: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

ERP and Software Systems

15-63

Page 64: Resource planningppt @ DOMS

Connectivity

• Application programming interfaces (APIs)• give other programs well-defined ways of speaking to

them

• Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) solutions• EDI is being replaced by XML, business

language of Internet• Service-oriented architecture (SOA)

• collection of “services” that communicate with each other within software or between software

15-64


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