Spreadsheet Modeling & Decision Analysis: A Practical Introduction To Business Analytics, Loose-leaf Version
8th Edition
ISBN: 9781337274852
Author: Ragsdale, Cliff
Publisher: South-Western College Pub
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Boston Company use a special part in manufacturing of its finished products. The unit cost thisspecial part is $ 35, and details of its manufacturing cost is as follows. The $35 unit productcost of this part is based on average 25,000 number of parts produced each year.An outside supplier has offered to supply the 25,000 parts at a cost of $30 per part. The specialequipment used to manufacture the above part. This equipment can only be used formanufacturing of this part and if not used it has no resale value.The total amount of general factory overhead, which is allocated based on direct labor-hours,would be unaffected by this decision because it is fixed cost..Suggest the management whether to stop producing internally and buy them from theoutside supplier?Description CAD Direct Materials 10Direct Labor 6Variable overheads…
The Marketing Manager of Dotcom Limited has conducted a market research on the price-demand
relationship for its consumer durable Product-V which has been recently launched. The price-demand
pattern will be as follows:
Price per unit (Rs.)
16.650
16.050
14.400
13.050
Product-V is manufactured in batches of 1.000 units. The production manager of Dotcom Limited has
also researched and studies the pattern and believes that 50% of the variable manufacturing cost would
have a learning effect. This learning curve effect will continue up to 4.000 units of production at constant
rate But after 4.000 units of production unit variable manufacturing cost would be equal to the unit cost
at the 4 batch. The manufacturing unit cost of the first batch will be Rs. 6.600 of which only 50% is
subjected to learning and experience curve effect. The average unit variable of all 4 batches will be
Rs 6.180
The price and maximum contribution at which Dotcom Limited should sell Product-V is:
Rs.14,400, Rs.…
Aboloway Company stocks a part that has a daily demand represented by the empirical distribution (shown in the table below). When restocking this part, the average lead time from the supplier is 3 days with a standard deviation of 0.5 days. The plant manager wants to determine how much safety stock to maintain for this part to ensure that stock-outs will not be incurred in more than 5.5% of the order cycles.
Daily demand (d) in units
Frequency
5
10
10
35
15
65
20
32
25
8
Total Observations = 150
3a. Find the mean and standard deviation for demand.
3b. Based on the information in problems 3 and 3a, what is the mean and standard deviation of demand during the lead time?
3c. Based on the information in problems 3, 3a, and 3b, how much safety stock should the plant manager maintain to ensure that stock-out will not be incurred in more than 5.5% of the order cycles?
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If a customer last placed an order four catalogs ago, there is a 4% chance she will order from the next catalog she receives. If a customer last placed an order five catalogs ago, there is a 2% chance she will order from the next catalog she receives. It costs 2 to send a catalog, and the average profit per order is 30. Assume a customer has just placed an order. To maximize expected profit per customer, would Seas Beginning make more money canceling such a customer after six nonorders or four nonorders?arrow_forwardScenario 3 Ben Gibson, the purchasing manager at Coastal Products, was reviewing purchasing expenditures for packaging materials with Jeff Joyner. Ben was particularly disturbed about the amount spent on corrugated boxes purchased from Southeastern Corrugated. Ben said, I dont like the salesman from that company. He comes around here acting like he owns the place. He loves to tell us about his fancy car, house, and vacations. It seems to me he must be making too much money off of us! Jeff responded that he heard Southeastern Corrugated was going to ask for a price increase to cover the rising costs of raw material paper stock. Jeff further stated that Southeastern would probably ask for more than what was justified simply from rising paper stock costs. After the meeting, Ben decided he had heard enough. After all, he prided himself on being a results-oriented manager. There was no way he was going to allow that salesman to keep taking advantage of Coastal Products. Ben called Jeff and told him it was time to rebid the corrugated contract before Southeastern came in with a price increase request. Who did Jeff know that might be interested in the business? Jeff replied he had several companies in mind to include in the bidding process. These companies would surely come in at a lower price, partly because they used lower-grade boxes that would probably work well enough in Coastal Products process. Jeff also explained that these suppliers were not serious contenders for the business. Their purpose was to create competition with the bids. Ben told Jeff to make sure that Southeastern was well aware that these new suppliers were bidding on the contract. He also said to make sure the suppliers knew that price was going to be the determining factor in this quote, because he considered corrugated boxes to be a standard industry item. Is Ben Gibson acting legally? Is he acting ethically? Why or why not?arrow_forwardScenario 3 Ben Gibson, the purchasing manager at Coastal Products, was reviewing purchasing expenditures for packaging materials with Jeff Joyner. Ben was particularly disturbed about the amount spent on corrugated boxes purchased from Southeastern Corrugated. Ben said, I dont like the salesman from that company. He comes around here acting like he owns the place. He loves to tell us about his fancy car, house, and vacations. It seems to me he must be making too much money off of us! Jeff responded that he heard Southeastern Corrugated was going to ask for a price increase to cover the rising costs of raw material paper stock. Jeff further stated that Southeastern would probably ask for more than what was justified simply from rising paper stock costs. After the meeting, Ben decided he had heard enough. After all, he prided himself on being a results-oriented manager. There was no way he was going to allow that salesman to keep taking advantage of Coastal Products. Ben called Jeff and told him it was time to rebid the corrugated contract before Southeastern came in with a price increase request. Who did Jeff know that might be interested in the business? Jeff replied he had several companies in mind to include in the bidding process. These companies would surely come in at a lower price, partly because they used lower-grade boxes that would probably work well enough in Coastal Products process. Jeff also explained that these suppliers were not serious contenders for the business. Their purpose was to create competition with the bids. Ben told Jeff to make sure that Southeastern was well aware that these new suppliers were bidding on the contract. He also said to make sure the suppliers knew that price was going to be the determining factor in this quote, because he considered corrugated boxes to be a standard industry item. As the Marketing Manager for Southeastern Corrugated, what would you do upon receiving the request for quotation from Coastal Products?arrow_forward
- LPM Corp. produces and sells two types of frozen burgers, Turkey Burgers and Veggie Burgers. In the most recent month, the firm sold 12,000 Turkey Burgers and 8,000 Veggie Burgers. Turkey Burgers sold for $14.00 per box and variable costs were $7.40 per box. The Veggie Burgers sold for $16.00 per box and variable costs were $8.25 per box. The fixed expenses of the entire company were $41,160. If the sales mix were to shift toward the Turkey Burgers product line with total sales volume remaining constant at 20,000, the overall break-even point for the entire company:arrow_forwardBernie’s Bike Shop receives the following trade discounts: 20/15/15. The vendor’s price list indicates that 20 percent off list price is for purchasing bikes in quantities of 100 or more, 15 percent off list price is for assembling the bikes for customers, and 15 percent is for sales promotion and local advertising. If the manufacturer’s list price is $550, what should Bernie pay for each bike if he orders 110 bikes at a time, assembles the bikes, and displays and advertises them?arrow_forwardFormulate the situation in matrix form. Be sure to indicate the meaning of your rows and columns. Find the requested quantities using the appropriate matrix arithmetic. A car dealer sells sedans, station wagons, vans, and pickup trucks at sales lots in Oakdale and Roanoke. The "dealer markup" is the difference between the sticker price and the dealer invoice price. The dealer invoice prices at both locations are the same: $15,000 per sedan, $19,000 per wagon, $24,000 per van, and $26,000 per pickup. The sticker prices at the Oakdale lot are $18,900 per sedan, $23,900 per wagon, $28,900 per van, and $28,900 per pickup, while at the Roanoke lot the sticker prices are $17,900 per sedan, $22,900 per wagon, $26,900 per van, and $30,900 per pickup. Represent these prices as a dealer invoice matrix D and a sticker price matrix S. Use these matrices to find the dealer markup matrix M for these vehicles at these sales lots. (Let row 1 represent the dealer in Oakdale and row 2 represent the…arrow_forward
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