Title: Strategic Capacity Planning Chapter 11 Strategic Capacity
1Strategic Capacity Planning
2Strategic Capacity Planning
- Capacity
- The maximum level of output
- The amount of resource inputs available relative
to output requirements at a particular time - Capacity is the upper limit or ceiling on the
load that an operating unit can handle.
3Examples of Capacity Measures
4Capacity Planning
- The basic questions in capacity planning are
- What type of capacity is needed?
- How much is needed?
- When is it needed?
- How does productivity relate to capacity?
5Two Capacity Strategies
Planned unused capacity
Forecast of capacity needed
Forecast of capacity needed
Planned use of short-term options
Capacity
Capacity
Time between increments
Expansionist Strategy
Wait-and-See Strategy
6Terminology
- Design capacity
- maximum obtainable output
- Effective capacity
- Maximum capacity given product mix, scheduling
difficulties, and other doses of reality. - Actual output
- rate of output actually achieved--cannot exceed
effective capacity.
7Capacity Utilization
- Capacity used
- rate of output actually achieved
- Best operating level
- capacity for which the process was designed
(effective or maximum capacity)
8Utilization--Example
- Best operating level 120 units/week
- Actual output 83 units/week
- Utilization ?
9Best Operating Level
Average unit cost of output
Underutilization
Over-utilization
Volume
10Economies Diseconomies of Scale
Long Run Average Cost Curve
Average unit cost of output
Volume
11Evaluating Alternatives
Minimum cost optimal operating rate are
functions of size of production unit.
Small plant
Average Cost per unit
Medium plant
Large plant
0
Output rate
12Calculating Processing Requirements
13Cost-Volume Relationships
Amount ()
Total cost VC FC
Total variable cost (VC)
Fixed cost (FC)
0
Q (volume in units)
14Cost-Volume Relationships
Total revenue
Amount ()
0
Q (volume in units)
15Cost-Volume Relationships
Profit
Total revenue
Amount ()
Total cost
0
BEP units
Q (volume in units)
16Break-Even Problem with Step Fixed Costs
FC VC TC
FC VC TC
3 machines
FC VC TC
2 machines
1 machine
Quantity
Step fixed costs and variable costs.
17Break-Even Problem with Step Fixed Costs
BEP
3
TC
BEP
2
TC
3
TC
2
TR
1
Quantity
Multiple break-even points
18Breakeven Analysis
Fixed Costs Price - Variable Costs
19Breakeven example
- Thomas Manufacturing intends to increase capacity
by overcoming a bottleneck operation through the
addition of new equipment. Two vendors have
presented proposals as follows - Proposal Fixed Costs Variable Costs
- A 50,000 12
- B 70,000 10
- The revenue for each product is 20
- What is the breakeven quantity for each proposal?
20Breakeven Solution
FC P- VC
Proposal A
Proposal B
21Breakeven Analysis
- In the previous example, at what capacity would
both plans incur the same cost?
Solution -consider total cost
Total cost Fixed cost Variable Cost (Q)
50,000 12Q 70,000 10 Q
Q 10,000
22The Experience Curve
As plants produce more products, they gain
experience in the best production methods and
reduce their costs per unit.
Cost or price per unit
Total accumulated production of units
23Capacity Flexibility Having the ability to
respond rapidly to demand volume changes and
product mix changes.
- Flexible plants
- Flexible processes
- Flexible workers
24Capacity Bottlenecks
Operation 1
Operation 2
Operation 3
200/hour
75/hour
200/hour
Raw material
25Capacity Planning
Units per month
6,000
7,000
4,500
- Maintaining System Balance
26Determining Capacity Requirements
- Forecast sales within each individual product
line - Calculate equipment and labor requirements to
meet the forecasts - Project equipment and labor availability over the
planning horizon
27Capacity Planning Process
28Example--Capacity Requirements
A manufacturer produces two lines of ketchup,
FancyFine and a generic line. Each is sold in
small and family-size plastic bottles. The
following table shows forecast demand for the
next four years.
29Example of Capacity Requirements The Product
from a Capacity Viewpoint
- Question Are we really producing two different
types of ketchup from the standpoint of capacity
requirements?
Answer No, its the same product just packaged
differently.
30Example of Capacity Requirements Equipment and
Labor Requirements
Three 100,000 units-per-year machines are
available for small-bottle production. Two
operators required per machine. Two 120,000
units-per-year machines are available for
family-sized-bottle production. Three operators
required per machine.
3131
Question Identify the Year 1 values for
capacity, machine, and labor?
150,000/300,00050
At 1 machine for 100,000, it takes 1.5 machines
for 150,000
At 2 operators for 100,000, it takes 3 operators
for 150,000
- The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2001
3232
Question What are the values for columns 2, 3
and 4 in the table below?
56.67 1.70 3.40
66.67 2.00 4.00
80.00 2.40 4.80
58.33 1.17 3.50
70.83 1.42 4.25
83.33 1.67 5.00
- The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2001
33Capacity Cushion
Capacity Cushion level of capacity in excess
of the average utilization rate or level of
capacity in excess of the expected demand
. Cushion Best Operating Level
Capacity Used
34Large capacity cushion
- Required to handle uncertainty in demand
- service industries
- high level of uncertainty in demand (in terms of
both volume and product-mix) - to permit allowances for vacations, holidays,
supply of materials delays, equipment breakdowns,
etc. - if subcontracting, overtime, or the cost of
missed demand is very high
35Sources of Uncertainty
Customer Deliveries
- Manufacturing
- Process design
- Product design
- Capacity
- Quality
- Transportation
- Location
- Information
- Supplier Performance
- Responsiveness
- Transportation
- Location
- Quality
- Information
- Customer Demand
- Past performance
- Market research
- Analytical techniques
- Promotions / Incentives
36Small capacity cushion
- Unused capacity still incurs the fixed costs
- highly capital intensive businesses
- time perishable capacity
37Cushion Best operating Level Actual
Demand
Or 1 Cushion Best operating Level
Actual Demand
Utilization Actual Demand Best
operating Level
38Example Target 5 Cushion
cushion Best Operating Level Capacity
Used
- 1
.05 (1800/x) - 1 1.05 (1800/x) 1714.3/1800
.9524 1.05x 1800 x 1714.3
39Capacity Example
- An automobile equipment supplier wishes to
install a sufficient number of ovens to produce
400,000 good castings per year. The baking
operation takes 2.0 minutes per casting, and
management requires a capacity cushion of 5.
How many ovens will be required if each one is
available for 1800 hours (of capacity) per year?
40Solution
- Required system capacity 400,000 good
units per year - Number of oven minutes required 400,000 x
2 min/unit 800,000 - Number of oven minutes available/oven
- (1800 hrs/oven) x(60 minutes/hour) (.9524)
102,859 minutes/oven - Number of ovens required
- 800,000 min /102,859 min/oven 7.8 or 8
ovens
41How does Quality affect capacity?
- Suppose a three operation process is followed by
an inspection. If the average proportion of
defectives produced at operations 1, 2, and 3 are
.04, .01, and .02 respectively, and if the demand
is 200 units, then what is the required capacity
for this operation?
42Capacity requirements with Yield Loss
- Notation
- di avg. proportion of defective units at
operation i - n number of operations in the production
process - M order quantity (good units only or desired
yield) - B avg. number of units at the start of the
- production process
-
43Solution
- Desired yield 200
- Operation Defective rate 1 .04
- 2 .01
- 3 .02
- (1) What is the capacity required?
-
44Capacity and Quality
- Suppose we have a 6 process assembly line that
must produce 1000 good products. Each process
produces only 1 defects. How is capacity
affected?
45Decision Trees
A glass factory specializing in crystal is
experiencing a substantial backlog, and the
firm's management is considering three courses of
action A) Arrange for subcontracting, B)
Construct new facilities. C) Do nothing (no
change) The correct choice depends largely upon
demand, which may be low, medium, or high. By
consensus, management ranks the respective
probabilities as .10, .50, and .40. A cost
analysis that reveals the effects upon costs is
shown in the following table.
46Payoff Table
47We start with our decisions...
Subcontracting
Construct new facilities
Do nothing
48Then add our possible states of nature,
probabilities, and payoffs
49Determine the expected value of each decision
50Solution
62k
80.5k
46k
51Planning Service Capacity
- Time
- Location
- Volatility of Demand
52Capacity Utilization Service Quality
- Best operating point is near 70 of capacity
- From 70 to 100 of service capacity, what do you
think happens to service quality? Why?
53Capacity Expansion StrategiesEntrepreneurial
Stage
- Shift resources to different tasks as needed
- Customer co-production
Multisite Rationalization Stage
- Add services to existing site
- Duplicate existing services at additional
sites - Relocate
Both?
54Capacity Planning
- Frequency of Capacity Additions
- External Sources of Capacity
55Two Capacity Strategies
Planned unused capacity
Forecast of capacity needed
Forecast of capacity needed
Planned use of short-term options
Capacity
Capacity
Time between increments
Expansionist Strategy
Wait-and-See Strategy
56Advantages/Disadvantages of each strategy
Advantages Disadvantages
- Expansionist ahead of competition
risky if demand no lost sales changes -
- Wait-and-See no unused capacity rely on
short- easier to adapt to term
options new technologies
57Some Short-Term Capacity Options
- lease extra space temporarily
- authorize overtime
- staff second or third shift with temporary
workers - add weekend shifts
- alternate routings, using different work stations
that may have excess capacity - schedule longer runs to minimize capacity
losses
58Some Short-Term Capacity Options
- level output by building up inventory in slack
season - postpone preventive maintenance (risky)
- use multi-skilled workers to alleviate
bottlenecks - allow backorders to increase, extend due date
promises, or have stock-outs. - subcontract work