Semester II
Examination Papers
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
Semester-II
Examination Paper MM.100
Production
and Operation Management
Section
A: Objective Type (30 marks)
This section consists of Multiple choice
questions & Short Notes type questions.
Answer all the questions.
Part One questions carry 1 mark each &
Part Two questions carry 5 marks each.
Part
One:
Multiple
choices:
1. If the number of
restrictions on sources be ‘a’ and the number of restrictions on destinations
be
‘b’ then with the use of ‘stepping
stone procedure’, the number of ‘used cells’ will be
a. a+b+1
b. a+b+2
c. a-b-1
d. a+b-1
2. Value of smoothing
coefficient ‘α’ lies
a. Between 1 and ∞
b. Between 0 and 1
c. Between -1 and 1
d. Between 1 and 2
3. Forecasting error is
a. The difference between
forecasted demand and actual demand
b. The ratio of forecasted
demand and actual demand
c. The difference between the
standard forecast demand and the evaluated forecast demand
d. Ratio of standard forecast
demand and the evaluated forecast demand
4. For forecasting the
analyzers plot the demand data on a time scale, study the plot and then look
for the consistent patterns.
Now what does the high noise mean to these patterns
a. Many of the point lie away
from the pattern
b. Most of the points lie
close to the pattern
c. All the points lie on the
pattern
d. None
5. Payback period is
a. The length of time after
which the production starts
b. The length of time after
which the selling starts
c. The length of time
required to recover the investment
d. The length of time for
which firm bears replacement of the good.
Semester II
Examination Papers
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
6. Salvage value is the
income from
a. Selling an asset
b. Buying an asset
c. Bargaining in selling
d. Price raised stock
7. On total factor basis ‘Productivity’
is given by x/y, where ‘y’ is
a. Labor + Capital +Materials
b. Labor + Capital +
Materials + Energy
c. Capital
d. Capital + Materials
8. Economic efficiency is
given by
a. Input /output
b. Input /100
c. (Output-input)/input
d. Output /input
9. This implies an effective
management that ensures an organization’s long-term commitment to
the continuous improvement of
quality.
a. Quality management
b. Strategic management
c. Total quality management
d. Operations management
10. This techniques for
improving productivity involves analyzing the operations of the product or
service, estimate the value
of each operation, and modifying (or) improving that operation so that
the cost is lowered.
a. Value engineering
b. Time-event network
c. Work simplifications
d. Quality circles
Part
Two:
1. What are the different
types of models in production and operation management?
2. Define ‘Depreciation’.
3. What do you understand by ‘Bias’?
4. What are ‘Learning curves’?
END OF SECTION A
Semester II
Examination Papers
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
Section
B: Caselets (40 marks)
This section consists of Caselets.
Answer all the questions.
Each caselet carries 20 marks.
Detailed information should form the part
of your answer (Word limit 200 to 250 words).
Caselet
1
COMPANY
BACKGROUND
The Bronson Insurance Group
was originally founded in 1900 in Auxvasse, Missouri, by James Bronson.
The Bronson Group owns a
variety of companies that underwrite personal and commercial insurance
policies. Annual sales of the
Bronson Group are $100 million. In recent years, the company has suffered
operating losses. In 1990,
the company was heavily invested in computer hardware and software. One of
the problems the Bronson
Group faced (as well as many insurance companies) was a conflict between
established manual procedures
and the relatively recent (within the past 20 years) introduction of
computer equipment. This
conflict was illustrated by the fact that much information was captured on
computer but paper files were
still kept for practical and legal reasons.
FILE
CLERKS
The file department employed
20 file clerks who pulled files from stacks, refilled used files, and delivered
files to various departments
including commercial lines, personal lines, and claims. Once a file clerk
received the file. Clerks
delivered files to underwriters on an hourly basis throughout the day. The
average file clerk was paid
$8,300 per year. One special file clerk was used full time to search for
requested files that another
file clerk had not been able to find in the expected place. It was estimated
that
40 percent of the requested
files were these “no hit” files requiring a search. Often these “no hit” files
were eventually found stacked
in the requester’s office. The primary “customers” of the file clerks were
underwriters and claims
attorneys.
UNDERWRITING
Company management and
operations analysts were consistently told that the greatest problem in the
company was the inability of
file clerks to supply files in a speedy fashion. The entire company from top
to bottom viewed the
productivity and effectiveness of the department as unacceptable. An
underwriter
used 20-50 files per day.
Because of their distrust of the files department, underwriters tended to hoard
often used files. A count by
operations analysts found that each underwriter kept from 100-200 files in his
or her office at any one
time. An underwriter would request a file by computer and work on other
business until the file was
received. Benson employed 25 underwriters.
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEM
Upper management was deeply
concerned about this problem. The MIS department had suggested using
video disks as a possible
solution. A video disk system was found that would be sufficient for the
Semester II
Examination Papers
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
companies needs at a cost of
about $12 million. It was estimated that the system would take two years to
install and make compatible
with existing information systems. Another, less attractive was using
microfilm. A microfilm system
would require underwriters to go to a single keyboard to request paper
copies of files. The cost of
a microfilm system was $5 million.
1. What do you recommend?
Should the company implement one of the new technologies? Why or
why not?
2. An operations analyst
suggested that company employees shared a “dump on the clerks”
mentality. Explain.
Caselet
2
Harrison T. Wenk III is 43,
married, and has two children, ages 10 and 14. He has a master’s degree
in education and teachers
junior high school music in a small town in Ohio. Harrison’s father passed
away two months ago, leaving
his only child an unusual business opportunity. According to his
father’s will, Harrison has
12 months to become active in the family food-catering business, Kare-
Full Katering, Inc., or it
will be sold to two key employees for a reasonable and fair price. If
Harrison becomes involved,
the two employees have the option to purchase a significant, but less
than majority, interest in
the firm. Harrison’s only involvement with this business, which his
grandfather established, was
as an hourly employee during high school and college summers. He is
confident that he could learn
and perhaps enjoy the marketing side of the business, and that he could
retain the long-time head of
accounting/finance. But he would never really enjoy day-to-day
operations. In fact, he doesn’t
understand what operations management really involves. In 1991
Kare-Full Katering, Inc. had
$3.75 million in sales in central Ohio. Net profit after taxes was $
105,000, the eleventh consecutive
year of profitable operations and the seventeenth in the last 20
years. There are 210
employees in this labor-intense business. Institutional contracts account for
over 70 percent of sales and
include partial food services for three colleges, six commercial
establishments) primarily
manufacturing plants and banks), two long -term care facilities, and five
grade schools. Some customer
location employs a permanent operations manager; others are served
from the main kitchens of
Kare-Full Katering. Harrison believes that if he becomes active in the
business, one of the two key
employees, the vice president of operations, will leave the
firm.Harrison has decided to
complete the final two months of this school year and then spend the
summer around Kare-Full Katering
– as well as institutions with their own food services – to assess
whether he wants to become
involved in the business. He is particularly interested in finding out as
much as possible about
operations. Harrison believes he owes it to his wife and children to fairly
evaluate this opportunity.
1. Prepare a worksheet of
operations activities that Harrison should inquire about this summer.
2. If you were Harrison, what
would you do? Why?
END OF SECTION B
Semester II
Examination Papers
IIBM
Institute of Business Management
Section
C: Applied Theory (30 marks)
This section consists of Long Questions.
Answer all the questions.
Each question carries 15 marks.
1. Productivity is an
important tool for mangers as it helps them to track progress toward the more
efficient use of resources in
producing goods and services. Elucidate.
2. In additional to
operations research, what are the other tools and techniques used by
organizations
to improve productivity?
END OF SECTION C
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IIBM
Institute of Business Management
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