20346 - OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT LAB
CLMG - M - IM - MM - AFC - CLAPI - CLEFIN-FINANCE - CLELI - ACME - DES-ESS - EMIT
Department of Management and Technology
Course taught in English
ALBERTO GRANDO
Course Objectives
Due to the higher and higher level of competitiveness that many industries have been experiencing in the recent years, manufacturing and service companies need to understand how to design their operations so as to improve simultaneously efficiency and effectiveness through the implementation of best practices.
This course illustrates how to design, manage and improve operations. It is characterized by the adoption of an experiential learning approach, through a Lab in which case studies, business games and simulations are intensively used. This teaching methodology lets the participant directly implement practices and tools learned in class, developing problem setting and problem solving skills, as well as group working ones. Thanks to the use of simulation tools, participants live a realistic experience of the problems affecting production systems. They can also appreciate the benefits that can be gained through the introduction of up-to-date managerial practices, which they have to implement during simulations and business games. This teaching methodology, heavily based on interaction and class participation, aims at providing students with a deep insight of the main problems and solutions peculiar of operations management through a learning experience that reproduces real life situations.
Course Content Summary
- Strategy, Operations and Global Competitiveness
- Process Planning and Design
- Capacity and Location Planning
- Production Planning
- Inventory Management
- Lean Production
- Supply Chain Management
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
Attending Students
The final evaluation is given weighting the grades of the team works and of the individual result in a final written exam
Non Attending Students
Written exam
Textbooks
Attending students
- J.R. MEREDITH, S.M. SHAFER, Operations Management for MBAs, John Wiley & Sons, 2007 (only the chapters indicated during classes and quoted in the detailed syllabus)
Non attending students
- J.R. MEREDITH, S.M. SHAFER, Operations Management for MBAs, John Wiley & Sons, 2007