The course objective is to provide the students
with an understanding of how the principles, theories and concepts
of Operations Management can be used to improve operational
effectiveness and enhance competiveness. The task of managing a
firm involves making tradeoffs among a range of interrelated
decisions which have a major impact on performance. This task is at
the heart of any organization and is what Operations Management is
concerned with - the activity of managing the resources of the
organization that deliver goods and services. After completing the
course the students should be able to:
- Account for the theories, tools, concepts, and methodologies of
Operations Management presented in the course
- Identify and analyze concrete issues of Operations Management
in firms in order to resolve these by applying the theories, tools,
concepts and methodologies
- Define the scope and limitations of Operations Management in
relation to related fields in production, services, processes, and
innovation
- Evaluate case situations and provide clear
recommendations
|
Paton, S., Clegg, B., Hsuan, J. and Pilkington, A. (2011),
Operations Management, 1st edition, McGraw
Hill.
|
Davila, A. (2003), “Short-term economic incentives in new
product development”, Research Policy, Vol. 32 No. 8, pp.
1397–1420.
Fisher, M.L., Hammond, J.H., Obermeyer, W.R. and Raman, A. (1994),
“Making Supply Meet Demand in an Uncertain World”, Harvard
Business Review, Vol. 72 No. 3, pp. 83–93.
Flores, B.E. and Whybark, D.C. (1986), “Multiple Criteria ABC
Analysis”, International Journal of Operations & Production
Management, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 38–46.
Harland, C.M., Lamming, R.C., Zheng, J. and Johnsen, T.E. (2001),
“A Taxonomy of Supply Networks”, Journal of Supply Chain
Management, Vol. 37 No. 3, pp. 21–27.
Hines, P., Holweg, M. and Rich, N. (2004), "Learning to
evolve: a review of contemporary lean thinking",
International Journal of Operations and Production
Management, Vol. 24 No. 10, pp. 994-1011.
Lee, H.L. (2002), “Aligning Supply Chain Strategies with Product
Uncertainties”, California Management Review, Vol. 44 No.
3, pp. 105–119.
Olhager, J. (2003), “Strategic positioning of the order
penetration point”, International Journal of Production
Economics, Vol. 85 No. 3, pp.
319–329. |
|