Operations
How fast
Inventory
Now?
Capacity
100

The purpose of business is to get inputs and ____ _____ to the output

Add value

100

producing output at the highest ratio of output to input

Efficiency

100

Another name for Stock

Inventory

100

JIT stands for

Just in Time

100

the proportion of maximum output capacity currently being achieved

Capacity utilisation

200

is concerned with the use of resources called inputs – land, labour and capital – to provide outputs in the form of goods and services.

Operations

200

involving a high level of labour input compared with capital equipment.

Labor Intensive

200

the normal time taken between ordering new stocks and their delivery

lead tie

200

Working capital tied up in goods in storage could be put to another use. I

opportunity costs

200

exists when the current levels of demand are less than the full capacity output of a business – also known as spare capacities

Excess Capacity 

300

The process of converting inputs into outputs

Transformation

300

meeting the objectives of the enterprise by using inputs productively to meet customers’ needs.

Effectivness

300

the optimum or least-cost quantity of stock to re-order taking into account delivery costs and stock-holding costs

Economic order quantity

300

Costs associated with Inventories have to be held in secure warehouses. They o! en require special conditions, such as refrigeration. 

Storage costs

300

reducing capacity by cutting overheads to increase e! iciency of operations, such as closing a factory or o! ice department, o# en involving redundancies

Rationalization

400

intangible capital of a business that includes human capital (well trained and knowledgeable employees), structural capital (databases and information systems) and relational captial (good links with supplier and customers)

intellectual Capital

400

involving a high quantity of capital equipment compared with labour input.

Capital intensive

400

the minimum inventory level that should be held to ensure that production could still take place should a delay in delivery occur or should production rates increase

Buffer inventory

400

If inventories are not used or sold as rapidly as expected, then there is an increasing danger of goods deteriorating or becoming outdated.

Risk of wastage and obsolescence

400

when a business produces at maximum output.

Full Capacity

500

the ratio of outputs to inputs during production, e.g. output per worker per time period

Productivity

500

converting inputs into outputs. 

Production/Transformation

500

businesses will hold inventories in three distinct forms

Raw materials, work in progress and Finished Goods

500

Keeping low inventory levels may mean only ordering goods and supplies in small quantities

Small order quantities

500

using another business (a ‘third party’) to undertake a part of the production process rather than doing it within the business using the firm’s own employees.

outsourcing

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