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NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Department of Electronic Engineering

Engineering Management [TEE 3255]

8: Operational Excellence &


Differentiation
Lesson Outline

• Introduction
• Tools for Achieving Operational Excellence (OE)
• Implementation of OE: Process Standardization
• Implementation of OE: Productivity Enhancement
Programs
• Implementation of OE: Emerging Tools
• Implementation of OE: Big Data
• Differentiation
• Conclusion
Introduction
Introduction

• Operational excellence (OE) refers to achieving a


superior level of productivity in all work
processes related to products/services offered by
an enterprise (Mitchell 2015).
Introduction

• The purpose of achieving OE is to slash cost,


speed up cycle time, ensure work output quality
(right at the very first attempt), eliminate waste,
and utilize corporate knowledge efficiently.
Tools for Achieving OE
Tools for Achieving OE

• There are a number of tools that product/service


enterprises may adopt to improve their operations.
• Process Standardization
• Productivity Enhancement Programs
• Emerging Tools
• Big Data
Tools for Achieving OE
Process Standardization
Process Standardization

• Work processes employed by a product/service


enterprise consist of procedures and activities
that may be standardized to a great extent.
• Engineers should utilise distinctive methodologies
that can enhance OE.
• Standardising the procedures results in cost
reduction, quality improvement, and process
optimization to derive OE.
Process Standardization

• Constantly searching for best practices in


industries will provide good starting points from
which to standardize specific work processes of
significance.
• Publish well-tested procedures for highly complex
operations.
• Publish checklists for performing complex
procedures, in order to minimise errors.
Tools for Achieving OE
Productivity Enhancement Programs
Lean Six Sigma

• Six Sigma is a well-known waste-reduction


methodology that has been applied with great
success in manufacturing industries.
• It employs the define, measure, analyse, improve,
and control (DMAIC) method to improve the
quality of standardized work processes.
Lean Six Sigma

• Phases of Six Sigma are:


• Define specific goals to achieve
outcomes, consistent with customers
demand and business strategy
• Measure the defects of current
process
• Analyse problems ,cause and effects
must be considered
• Improve process on bases of
measurements and analysis
• Control process to minimize defects
Lean Six Sigma

• DMADV
• Define the project
• Measure the opportunity
• Analyse the process options
• Design the process
• Verify the performance
Lean Six Sigma

• The Lean principle centres on process speed.


• Together, Lean and Six Sigma strive to simplify
work complexity.
• This methodology requires that an enterprise
follow a well-defined procedure to speed up the
work processes and eliminate wastes in
delivering products/services.
Lean Six Sigma

• Harvard Pilgrim, a health insurance company


located in Boston, Massachusetts, made the
following decisions:
• Transfer about 40% of the company’s noncore activities to outside vendors. These
activities include pharmacy-benefit management, disease management, behaviour
health management, and claims processing.
• Engage outside experts to perform data mining analyses in order to discover patients
who might be in the early stages of developing heart disease and diabetes, so that
these patients could be enrolled in preventive care or disease management programs
before their medical conditions become serious.
• Focus on distinctive activities that confer competitive advantage to the company. These
include customer service, design of new services, pricing health insurance, attracting
doctors into the network, selling to large customer groups, and marketing to individual
policyholders.
Lean Six Sigma

• Six sigma project: treating water.


• Define: The unit for treating Water had never been able to handle the nameplate
capacity in 15 years. Treatment chemical costs were higher than other types of
treatment units.
• Measure: Confirmed flow rate through the system vs. nameplate.
• Analyse: Evaluation of the system found many measurements that were off by
over 100%. Hourly operations identified key variables in the operation of the unit
and the acceptable range of each. Conducted three different Designed
Experiments.
• Improve: Corrected the measurement problems. Found set of operating
variables that produced 107% of nameplate capacity at higher quality with lower
chemical use. Chemical use reduced by $180K per year.
• Control: Hourly operations trained, procedures modified, process to check
measurement instituted. Model for changes in inlet water conditions.
Lean Six Sigma
99% Good (3.8 Sigma) 99.99966% Good (6 Sigma)
• 20,000 lost articles of mail per hour • Seven articles lost per hour
• Unsafe drinking water for almost 15
• One unsafe minute every seven
minutes each day
months
• 5,000 incorrect surgical operations per
week • 1.7 incorrect operations per week

• Two short or long landings at most major • One short or long landing every five
airports each day years

• 200,000 wrong drug prescriptions each


• 68 wrong prescriptions per year
year

• No electricity for almost seven hours each • One hour without electricity every 34
month years
Web-Based Enablers

• Many web-based software tools are commercially


available to offer assistance in general activities
related to project management, customer
relationship management (CRM), enterprise
resource planning (ERP) and collaboration.
Web-Based Enablers

• The following statistics support the importance of


this CRM function:
a) It costs five times more to sell to a new customer than to sell to an
existing one
b) A typical dissatisfied customer tells eight to ten people about the bad
experience
c) A company can boost its profit by 85% by increasing its annual
customer retention by only 5%
d) The odds of selling a service to a new customer are 15%; whereas
they are 50% with an existing customer
e) 70% of complaining customers will do business with the company
again if past service deficiencies are quickly corrected.
Web-Based Enablers

• Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) software is


designed to integrate all operations e,g, finance,
manufacturing, engineering, distribution, decision
support, procurement, knowledge management,
marketing and sales etc. into one IT system
• To achieve sustainable profitability, enterprises
need to plan, align, execute, and control all basic
business processes.
Web-Based Enablers

• Project management deals with the management


of human and physical resources that are
required to attain a well-defined project objective
on time and within budget.
• The best practices in project management
emphasize the following key management issues:
scope, schedule, resources, cost, risk,
communications, and knowledge.
Tools for Achieving OE
Emerging Tools
Web Services

• There are two specific types of web services.


• The first type is associated with application
services that are delivered to human users over
the web.
• The second type is related to applications modules
that are made accessible to other applications
over the Internet through XML-based protocols.
Web Services

• Amazon, Sun Microsystems, Microsoft etc. are


known to be vendors of the first type services:
• Storage
• Computing - Elastic Cloud Computing (EC2)
• Database
• Flexible payment services (FPS)
• Build and host web applications
• Premium support
Web Services

• The second type of web services deals with


creating modularized applications that interact
with other modularized applications, following
specific standards regarding language, data
description, data exchange, and connection
protocols
Tools for Achieving OE
Big Data
Big Data

• Big data are high-volume, high-velocity and/or


high-variety information assets that require new
ways of processing (e.g., massively parallel
software running on thousands of servers) in
order to inform decision-making, discover
insights, and pursue process optimization.
• Examples of such data sets include web logs, social networks, social
data, Internet text and documents, Internet search indexing, call detail
records, medical records, large-scale e-commerce, photography
archives, and video archives.
Big Data

• Developed economies make increasing use of


data-intensive technologies. As big data
represents a rich source of information, which
could be mined to foster competitive advantages,
its systematic use will have an important impact
on services in the future.
Implementation of Operational Excellence
Implementation of Operational Excellence

1. Selection of OE Projects
2. Financial Viability of Selected OE Projects
3. Technical Feasibility
4. Management Commitment
5. Project Execution
6. Documentation and Lessons Preservation
7. Organizational Resizing due to Operational
Excellence
Differentiation
Differentiation

• The differentiation strategy involves an attempt


to distinguish the firm’s products or services
from others in the industry.
• The organization may use creative advertising,
distinctive product features, exceptional service,
or new technology to achieve a product
perceived as unique.
Differentiation

• Examples of products that have benefited from a


differentiation strategy include Harley-Davidson
motorcycles, Snapper lawn equipment, and
Gore-Tex fabrics, all of which are perceived as
distinctive in their markets. Service companies
such as Starbucks, Whole Foods Market, and
IKEA also use a differentiation strategy.
Differentiation

• A differentiation strategy can:


• reduce rivalry with competitors if buyers are loyal
to a company’s brand.
• reduce the bargaining power of large buyers
because other products are less attractive, which
also helps the firm fight off threats of substitutes.
• erect entry barriers that a new entrant into the
market would have difficulty overcoming in the form
of customer loyalty.
Conclusion
Conclusion

• OE is focused on doing things right (as related to


internal work processes, customer problem
solving, corporate knowledge management
practices, speed of service delivery, and other
supplemental service elements important to
customers).
Conclusion

• Besides invoking the standard engineering


management functions, engineers must become
well versed in utilizing tools such as Lean Six
Sigma, web-based applications software, web
services, mobile computing and data mining.
Conclusion

• OE is achieved when the process speed is


increased at minimal cost, service quality is
enhanced , and service costs are minimized.
• OE can be further enhanced by an increase in
productivity, if web-based applications software is
selectively employed on a pay-as-you-go basis.
End of Operational Excellence

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