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Production and Operations Management




                    Notes          Once an operations manager has committed an organisation to a specific location, many costs
                                   are firmly in place and difficult to reduce. For instance, if a new factory location is in a region
                                   with high energy costs, even good management with an outstanding energy strategy is starting
                                   at a disadvantage. The same is true of a good human resource strategy if labour in the selected
                                   location is expensive, ill-trained, or has a poor work ethic. Consequently, hard work to determine
                                   an optimal facility location is a good investment.
                                   Types of Facilities


                                   The various types of facilities are briefly described below:

                                   Heavy Manufacturing

                                   Heavy manufacturing facilities are primarily plants that are relatively large and require a lot of
                                   space and as a result, are expensive to construct.

                                          Examples: Automobile plants, steel mills and oil refineries.

                                   Important factors  in the  location decision for plants  include construction costs, modes  of
                                   transportation for shipping heavy manufactured items and receiving bulk shipments of raw
                                   materials, proximity to raw materials, utilities, means of waste disposal and labour availability.
                                   Sites for manufacturing plants are normally selected where construction and land costs can be
                                   kept at a minimum and raw material sources are nearby in order to reduce transportation costs.
                                   Access to railroads is frequently a major factor in locating a plant. Environmental issues have
                                   increasingly become a major factor in plant location decisions. Plants can create various forms
                                   of pool pollution  and traffic pollution. These plants must  be located  where the  harm to the
                                   environment is minimised. Although proximity to customers is an important factor for some
                                   facility types, it is less so for manufacturing plants.

                                   Light Industry

                                   Light industry facilities are typically perceived as smaller, cleaner plants that produce electronic
                                   equipment and components, parts used in assemblies, or assembled products.

                                          Examples:  Making  stereos, TVs,  or  computers,  tool  and  die  shop,  breweries,  or
                                   pharmaceutical firms.
                                   Several factors are important for light industry. Land and construction costs are not generally as
                                   crucial, because the plants tend to be smaller and require less engineering. It is not as important
                                   to be near raw materials, since  they are not received  in large bulk quantities,  nor is storage
                                   capacity required to as  great a  degree. As a result,  transportation costs  are somewhat  less
                                   important. Many parts and material suppliers fall into this category and as such, proximity to
                                   customers can be an important factor.  Alternatively, many light industries  ship directly  to
                                   regional  warehouses  or  distributors,  making  it  less  important  to  be  near  customers.
                                   Environmental issues are less important in light industry, since burning raw materials is not
                                   normally  part  of  their  production  processes,  not  are  there  large  quantities  of  waste.
                                   Important factors include the labour pool,  especially the  availability of  skilled workers,  the
                                   community environment, access to commercial air travel, government regulation and land use
                                   requirements.






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