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CH 13-1
CH 13-1
CH 13-1
Aggregate Planning
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Aggregate Planning
Aggregate planning
Intermediate-range capacity planning that typically
covers a time horizon of 2 to 18 months
Useful for organizations that experience seasonal, or
other variations in demand
Goal:
Achieve a production plan that will effectively utilize the
organizations resources to satisfy demand
13-2
Planning Levels
13-3
The Planning Sequence
Economic,
Corporate Aggregate
competitive
strategies demand
and political
and policies forecasts
conditions
Establishes operations
Business Plan
and capacity strategies
Establishes
Aggregate Plan
operations capacity
Establishes schedules
Master Schedule
for specific products
13-4
Aggregation
The plan must be in units of measurement that can be
understood by the firms non-operations personnel
Aggregate units of output per month
Dollar value of total monthly output
Total output by factory
Measures that relate to capacity such as labor hours
13-5
Dealing with Variation
Most organizations use rolling 3, 6, 9 and 12
month forecasts
Forecasts are updated periodically, rather than relying
on a once-a-year forecast
13-6
Dealing with Variation
Strategies to counter variation:
Maintain a certain amount of excess capacity to handle increases in
demand
Maintain a degree of flexibility in dealing with changes
Hiring temporary workers
Using overtime
Wait as long as possible before committing to a certain level of supply
capacity
Schedule products or services with known demands first
Wait to schedule other products until their demands become less
uncertain
13-7
Overview of Aggregate Planning
13-8
Aggregate Planning Strategies
Proactive
Alter demand to match capacity
Reactive
Alter capacity to match demand
Mixed
Some of each
13-9
Demand Options
Pricing
Used to shift demand from peak to
off-peak periods
Price elasticity is important
Promotion
Advertising and other forms of
promotion
Back orders
Orders are taken in one period and
deliveries promised for a later
period
New demand
13-10
Supply Options
Hire and layoff workers
Overtime/slack time
Part-time workers
Inventories
Subcontracting
13-11
Aggregate Planning Pure Strategies
Level capacity strategy:
Maintaining a steady rate of regular-time output while
meeting variations in demand by a combination of
options:
inventories, overtime, part-time workers, subcontracting,
and back orders
Chase demand strategy:
Matching capacity to demand; the planned output for
a period is set at the expected demand for that period.
13-12
Techniques for Aggregate Planning
General procedure:
1.Determine demand for each period
2.Determine capacities for each period
3.Identify company or departmental policies that are pertinent
4.Determine unit costs
5.Develop alternative plans and costs
6.Select the plan that best satisfies objectives. Otherwise return to
step 5.
13-13
Trial-and-Error Techniques
Trial-and-error approaches consist of developing simple
table or graphs that enable planners to visually compare
projected demand requirements with existing capacity
Alternatives are compared based on their total costs
Disadvantage of such an approach is that it does not
necessarily result in an optimal aggregate plan
13-14
Trial-and-Error Technique Assumptions
The regular output capacity is the same in all periods
Cost is a linear function composed of unit cost and number of units
Plans are feasible
All costs are associated with a decision option can be represented
by a lump sum
Cost figures can be reasonably estimated and are constant for the
planning period
Inventories are built up and drawn down at a uniform rate
throughout each period
Backlogs are treated as if they exist the entire period
13-15
Cumulative Graph
Cumulative output/demand
Inventory Shortage
Inventory Build Up
Cumulative
production
Cumulative
demand
Period
13-16
Problem 5: (pg. 640)
Manager T.C. Downs of plum Engines, a producer of
lawn mowers and leaf blowers, must develop an
aggregate plan given the forecast for engine
demand shown in the table. The department has a
normal capacity of 130 engines per month. Normal
output has a cost of $60 per engine. The beginning
inventory is zero engines. Overtime has a cost of
$90 per engine.
a. Develop a chase plan that matches the forecast
and compute the total cost of your plan.
13-17
b. Compare the costs to a level plan that uses
inventory to absorb fluctuations. Inventory
carrying cost is $2 per engine per month.
Backlog cost is $90 per engine per month.
Month 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Total
Forecast 120 135 140 120 125 125 140 135 1,040
13-18
Problem 8: (pg. 641)
Nowjuice, Inc., produces bottled pomogrante juice. A
planner as developed an aggregate forecast for
demand (in cases) for the next six months.
Month May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct
Forecast 4,000 4,800 5,600 7,200 6,400 5,000
13-21
Aggregate Planning in Services
Hospitals:
Aggregate planning used to allocate funds, staff, and supplies to
meet the demands of patients for their medical services
Restaurants:
Aggregate planning in high-volume businesses is directed
toward smoothing the service rate, determining workforce size,
and managing demand to match a fixed capacity
Can use inventory; however, it is perishable
13-22
Aggregate Planning in Services
The resulting plan in services is a time-phased
projection of service staff requirements
Aggregate planning in manufacturing and services is
similar, but there are some key differences related to:
1. Demand for service can be difficult to predict
2. Capacity availability can be difficult to predict
3. Labor flexibility can be an advantage in services
4. Services occur when they are rendered
13-23
Yield Management
Yield management
An approach to maximizing revenue by using a strategy of
variable pricing; prices are set relative to capacity availability
During periods of low demand, price discounts are
offered
During periods of peak demand, higher prices are
charged
Users of yield management include
Airlines, restaurants, hotels, restaurants
13-24
Disaggregation
Aggregate
Aggregate
Plan
Plan
Disaggregation
Disaggregation
Master
Master
Schedule
Schedule
13-25
Disaggregating the Aggregate Plan
Master schedule:
The result of disaggregating an aggregate plan
Shows quantity and timing of specific end items for a
scheduled horizon
13-26
Master Scheduling
The heart of production planning and control
It determines the quantity needed to meet demand from all
sources
It interfaces with
Marketing
Capacity planning
Production planning
Distribution planning
Provides senior management with the ability to determine whether
the business plan and its strategic objectives will be achieved
13-27
The Master Scheduler
The master schedulers duties:
Evaluating the impact of new orders
Providing delivery dates for orders
Deals with problems
Evaluating the impact of production or delivery delays
Revising master schedule when necessary because of
insufficient supplies or capacity
Bring instances of insufficient capacity to the attention of
relevant personnel so they can participate in resolving conflicts
13-28
The Master Scheduling Process
Inputs Outputs
Beginning inventory
Projected inventory
Master
Forecast Production Master production schedule
Schedule
Uncommitted inventory
Customer orders
13-29
Master Scheduling Process
The master production schedule (MPS) is one of the primary
outputs of the master scheduling process
Once a tentative MPS has been developed, it must be validated
Rough cut capacity planning (RCCP) is a tool used in the
validation process
Approximate balancing of capacity and demand to test the feasibility of
a master schedule
Involves checking the capacities of production and warehouse
facilities, labor, and vendors to ensure no gross deficiencies exist that
will render the MPS unworkable
13-30
MPS Forecasts and Customer Orders
13-31
MPS Projected On Hand
13-32
Determining MPS and Projected On Hand
13-33
Adding MPS and Projected On Hand to the MPS
13-34
Available to Promise
13-35
Time Fences
Period
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
13-36
Problems 19: (pg.643)
Prepare a master production schedule for
industrial pumps in the manner of Figure 13.11 in
the chapter. Use the same inputs as the example,
but change the MPS rule from schedule
production when the projected on-hand inventory
would be negative without production to
schedule production when the projected on-hand
inventory would be less than 10 without prodution.
13-37
Problem 20: (pg. 643)
Update the master schedule shown in Figure
13.11 given these updated inputs: It is now the
end of week 1; customer orders are 25 for week
2, 16 for week 3, 11 for week 4, 8 for week 5,
and 3 for week 6. Use the MPS rule of ordering
production when projected on-hand inventory
would be negative without production.
13-38
Problem 21: (pg. 643)
Prepare a master schedule like that shown in Figure
13.11 given this information: The forecast for each
week of an eight-week schedule is 50 units. The
MPS rule is to schedule production if the projected
on-hand inventory would be negative without it.
Customer orders (committed) are as follows:
Week Customer Orders
1 52
2 35
3 20
4 12
Use a production lot size of 75 units and no beg. inventory
13-39
Problem 22: (pg. 643)
13-40