![Operations Management (McGraw-Hill Series in Operations and Decision Sciences)](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780078024108/9780078024108_largeCoverImage.gif)
Concept explainers
UPD Manufacturing produces a range of health care appliances for hospital as well as for home use. The company has experienced a steady demand for its products, which are highly regarded in the health care field. Recently the company has undertaken a review of its inventory ordering procedures as part of a larger effort to reduce costs.
One of the company's products is a blood pressure testing kit. UPD manufactures all of the components for the kit in house except for the digital display unit. The display units are ordered at six-week intervals from the supplier. This ordering system began about five years ago, because the supplier insisted on it. However, that supplier was bought out by another supplier about a year ago, and the six-week ordering requirement is no longer in place. Nonetheless, UPD has continued to use the six-week ordering policy. According to purchasing manager Tom Chambers, "Unless somebody can give me a reason for changing, I'm going to stick with what we've been doing. I don't have time to reinvent the wheel."
Further discussions with Tom revealed a cost of $32 to order and receive a shipment of display units from the supplier. The company assembles 89 kits a week. Also, information from Sara James, in Accounting, indicated a weekly carrying cost of $.08 for each display unit.
The supplier has been quite reliable with deliveries; orders are received five working days after they are faxed to the supplier. Tom indicated that as far as he was concerned, lead-time variability is virtually nonexistent.
Would using an order interval other than every six weeks reduce costs? If so, what order interval would be best, and what order size would that involve?
![Check Mark](/static/check-mark.png)
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution![Blurred answer](/static/blurred-answer.jpg)
Chapter 13 Solutions
Operations Management (McGraw-Hill Series in Operations and Decision Sciences)
- How can a local tourism and hospitality company successfully enter international markets?arrow_forwardHow was Circuit City Company collapsed? And what was the sequence of time and events or problems? How to solve the issues, and could you help identify positions or titles. Sanitize all names and use only fictitious data. What is synthesize the qualitative research methodology of Case Study research? Please give some examples. How to use the practical of Lean Six Sigma to develop a business-facing DMAIC-based case studyarrow_forwardBUSINESS MODEL CANVAS: U.S ARMY key partners: Key activities: Key Resources: Value Propositions: Buy-in & Support: Deployment: Benficiaries: Mission budget/cost: Mission Achievement/ Impact factors: Please at least 4 for each categoryarrow_forward
- how you would best conduct a performance evaluation meeting with a subordinate (where an employee would receive their performance evaluation from their supervisor). Importantly, detail how a supervisor can best gain the concurrence from an employee on the evaluation itself, and to ensure that the employee’s performance will be modified as a result of appraisal meeting.arrow_forwardI need answer typing clear urjent no chatgpt used pls i will give 5 Upvotes.arrow_forwardassume that you are police commander which leads and supervises the department’s internal affairs division. Your goal is to reduce civilian complainants against personnel in the department. Using what you have learned and at least three scholarly sources, document two changes you see the department can implement, whether it be training, planning, mitigating, and resolving, to improve police/community relations.arrow_forward
- Ness Engineering is a private limited company mainly engaged in the continuous production and assembly of domestic products. The annual turnover is $900,000,000. The largest area of expenditure is raw materials and components where the annual spend is approximately $450,000,000. The Managing Director, Bill, considers that profit margins are too small and has asked you to suggest how profitability might be increased. Bill suggests that this might be done by appointing additional sales staff and by an advertising campaign, which would, hopefully, increase turnover and thereby reduce overhead cost per item. You find that purchasing is little more than a post-office function. Specifications are received from the design or user departments and sent either to supplies designated by the directors or to the supplier providing the cheapest quotation. The company does, in fact, deal with many suppliers and issues many orders for low-cost items. All purchasing is done by manual means. None of the…arrow_forwardThe oasis outpost of Abu Ilan, in the heart of the Negev desert, has a population of 20 Bedouin tribesmen and 20 Farima tribesmen. El Kamin, a nearby oasis, has a population of 32 Bedouins and 8 Farima. A lost Israeli soldier, accidentally separated from his army unit, is wandering through the desert and arrives at the edge of one of the oases. The soldier has no idea which oasis he has found, but the first person he spots at a distance is a Bedouin. 1. What is the probability that he wandered into Abu Ilan? 2. What is the probability that he is in El Kamin?arrow_forward2-22 The lost Israeli soldier mentioned in Problem 2-21 decides to rest for a few minutes before entering the desert oasis he has just found. Closing his eyes, he dozes off for 15 minutes, wakes, and walks toward the center of the oasis. The first person he spots this time he again recognizes as a Bedouin. What is the posterior probability that he is in El Kamin?*Note* 2-21 The oasis outpost of Abu Ilan, in the heart of the Negev desert, has a population of 20 Bedouin tribesmen and 20 Farima tribesmen. El Kamin, a nearby oasis, has a population of 32 Bedouins and 8 Farima. A lost Israeli soldier, accidentally separated from his army unit, is wandering through the desert and arrives at the edge of one of the oases. The soldier has no idea which oasis he has found, but the first person he spots at a distance is a Bedouin. What is the probability that he has wandered into Abu Ilan? What is the probability that he is in El Kamin?arrow_forward
- Hello, please make an excel of this. Show all the cells thanks. some replied with a paper answer thank you I just cant understand the way the did it. Can someone show me all screenshots o fthis problem solved and in excel? i need to solver too for the constraints. I seen multiple times across other platforms that one of the chairs optimal solutions is 0 but they both have to be higher than 1 The Heinrich Company manufactures two types of plastic hangerracks (Foldaways and Straightaways) especially suited for mountingnear clothes dryers. Because permanent press clothing must be hungon hangers immediately after removal from the dryer, these items havebeen especially popular. However, there is some concern that thePreppie movement (popularized by its own handbook) will extinguishpolyester clothing; Heinrich is terribly interested in doing the best withthe resources it has while its products are still in demand. The firsttype of hanger rack, the Foldaway, requires 10 ounces of…arrow_forwardReview the Profit Ratio by Product chart again. What information is uncovered when the data is less aggregated than the data in Profit Ratio by Category chart?arrow_forwardWhat is the correlation between Measure A and Measure B in this example?arrow_forward
- Purchasing and Supply Chain ManagementOperations ManagementISBN:9781285869681Author:Robert M. Monczka, Robert B. Handfield, Larry C. Giunipero, James L. PattersonPublisher:Cengage LearningContemporary MarketingMarketingISBN:9780357033777Author:Louis E. Boone, David L. KurtzPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Practical Management ScienceOperations ManagementISBN:9781337406659Author:WINSTON, Wayne L.Publisher:Cengage,
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9781285869681/9781285869681_smallCoverImage.gif)
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9780357033777/9780357033777_smallCoverImage.jpg)
![Text book image](https://www.bartleby.com/isbn_cover_images/9781337406659/9781337406659_smallCoverImage.gif)