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Production and Operations Management




                    Notes          needs, and expectations; delighting customers; and building loyalty.  The Category  stresses
                                   relationships as an imperative part of an overall listening, learning, and performance excellence
                                   strategy. Your customer satisfaction and dissatisfaction results provide imperative information
                                   for understanding your customers and the marketplace. In many cases, such results and trends
                                   provide the mainly meaningful information, not only on your customers’ views but also  on
                                   their marketplace behaviours (e.g., repeat business and positive referrals) and how these views
                                   and behaviours may put in to the sustainability of your organisation in the marketplace.

                                   Category 4: Measurement, Analysis and Knowledge Management

                                   The Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management Category is the major point within
                                   the Criteria for all key information about successfully measuring, analysing, and improving
                                   performance and managing organisational knowledge to drive perfection and organisational
                                   competitiveness. In the simplest terms, Category 4 is the “brain centre” for the coalition of your
                                   organisation’s operations with its strategic objectives. Central to such use of data and information
                                   are  their  quality  and  availability.  In  addition,  since  information,  analysis,  and
                                   knowledge management might themselves  be prime sources of  competitive advantage  and
                                   productivity growth, this Category as well includes such strategic considerations.

                                   Category 5: Workforce Focus

                                   Workforce Focus addresses key workforce practices-those directed in the direction of creating
                                   and maintaining a high-performance workplace and on the way to engaging your workforce to
                                   enable it and your organisation to adapt to alter and to succeed. The Category covers workforce
                                   engagement, development,  and management  in an  integrated way (i.e.,  aligned with  your
                                   organisation’s strategic  objectives  and action plans). Your  workforce  focal point  includes
                                   your capability  and  capacity needs and  your  workforce  support climate. To  reinforce  the
                                   fundamental alignment of workforce management with overall strategy, Criteria also covers
                                   human resource planning as part of on the whole planning in the Strategic Planning Category

                                   Category 6: Process Management

                                   Process Management  is the  central point within the Criteria for your key work systems and
                                   work  processes. Built  into the Category  are the  vital  requirements  for  identification  and
                                   management  of  your  core  competencies  to  attain efficient  and  effective  work  process
                                   management: effective design; a prevention orientation; linkage to customers, suppliers, partners,
                                   and  collaborators  and  a  spotlight  on  value  creation  for  all  key  stakeholders;
                                   operational performance;  cycle time;  emergency  readiness;  and  evaluation,  continuous
                                   improvement, and organisational learning. Agility, cost reduction, and cycle time  reduction
                                   are more and more significant in all aspects of process management and organisational design.
                                   In the simplest terms, “agility” refers to your ability to adapt quickly, flexibly, and effectively
                                   to changing requirements. Depending on the personality of your organisation’s strategy and
                                   markets, agility  might mean rapid  change from  one product to another, rapid  response  to
                                   changing demands, or the ability to produce a wide range of customised services. Agility also
                                   more and more involves decisions  to outsource,  agreements with key suppliers, and  novel
                                   partnering  arrangements.  Flexibility  possibly  will  demand  special  strategies,  such  as
                                   implementing modular designs, sharing components, sharing manufacturing lines, or providing
                                   specialised training. Cost and cycle  time reduction  often engross Lean process  management
                                   strategies. It  is vital to utilise key measures for tracking all aspects of  your overall process
                                   management.





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