Aggregate Planning - eng.uwi.tt · Aggregate Planning • Nature of Aggregate Planning ... –...

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1 Aggregate Planning Nature of Aggregate Planning • Costs Decision Processes Nature of Aggregate Planning Macro Planning Bypass the details of individual products No need for individual scheduling of facilities and personnel Logical overall unit for measuring output Gallons, Cases, Pallets, Machine hours, Beds, etc Forecast for the planning period Measure all relevant costs To permit near optimal decision making

Transcript of Aggregate Planning - eng.uwi.tt · Aggregate Planning • Nature of Aggregate Planning ... –...

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Aggregate Planning

• Nature of Aggregate Planning• Costs• Decision Processes

Nature of Aggregate Planning

• Macro Planning– Bypass the details of individual products– No need for individual scheduling of facilities and

personnel

• Logical overall unit for measuring output– Gallons, Cases, Pallets, Machine hours, Beds, etc

• Forecast for the planning period• Measure all relevant costs

– To permit near optimal decision making

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Nature of Aggregate Planning

• Increases the range of alternatives for capacity use (Pure Strategies)– Use of inventory– Varying size of work force– Varying work hours– Subcontract the fluctuations– Decide not to meet demand

• Companies seek to balance the effect of these strategies by combining the pure strategies into Mixed Strategies

Costs

• Aggregate Planning is influenced by several relevant costs:– Payroll Costs– Cost of Overtime, Second shifts, and

Subcontracting– Cost of hiring and laying off workers– Cost of excess inventory and backlog– Cost of production rate changes

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Cost Behavior Patterns

Decision Processing

• The Aggregate Planning problem is the production planning problem of an organization seeking to meet a varying pattern of demand over an intermediate span of time

• The problem is to set aggregate production rates and workforce levels for each planning period

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Problem

Note• Demand peaks at 11, 000 and has a minimum of

4,000• The production days of each month varies• Production rates varies from 591/day to 174/day• Normal plant capacity is 350 units per day• Overtime can yield a maximum of 410 units/day• Overtime units cost an additional $10 each• Buffer stock, to compensate for fluctuations in

demand

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Plan 1: Level Production

• The simplest production plan is to establish the production output which will meet the annual requirements (76,500/244 = 314/day)

• The strategy is to accumulate inventory during the slow periods and use them during peak requirement periods

Plan 1: Level Production

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Plan 1: Level Production

• The plan calls for dipping into the buffer stock in August

• Buffer stock is actually exceeded in September• Results in a shortfall of 7738 units at the end of

the year• If we decide not to use the buffer stock, we must

increase the beginning inventory by the most negative inventory

• Average seasonal inventory will increase

Plan 1: Level Production

• Assuming:– Inventory holding cost =$50/unit/year– Shortage cost = $25/unit/year

Total Costs

Shortage Costs

Holding Costs

$334,980$350,8300$193,450$334,980$157,380

Stock3552 Units

Buffer2800 Units

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Plan 1: Level Production

• Advantages– Does not require hiring or firing of personnel– Scheduling is simple

• Disadvantages– Fails to consider the economic advantages of

trading off large seasonal inventory and shortage cost for overtime and hiring/firing costs

Plan 2: Hiring, Layoff, and Overtime

• Normal Plant capacity = 350 units/day• Overtime increase = 60 units/day• Cost of overtime = $10/unit• Cost of Hiring/Layoff = $200/person

– Hiring, training, severance, insurance

• 1 person hired, results in 1 unit capacity increase per day

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Plan 2: Hiring, Layoff, and Overtime

• Involves:– 0 to 65 days – Produce at 230 units/day– 66 to 171 days – Produce at 406 units/day

• Hire 120 workers (230 � 350) and produce 56 units/day overtime

– 172 to 182 days – Produce 350 units/day– 183 to 226 days – Produce 230 units/day

• Layoff 120 workers (350 � 230)

– 227 to 244 days – Produce 253 units/day• 23 units/day overtime

Plan 2: Hiring, Layoff and Overtime

• Results:– Seasonal Inventory reduced by 75% of Plan 1

with shortages and 35% of Plan 1 without shortages

– Hiring and layoff Costs = $48, 000– Overtime Costs = $63, 500– Total Cost = $339, 320 which is 65% Plan 1

with shortages and 68% Plan 1 without shortages

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Plan 2: Hiring, Layoff and Overtime

Plan 2: Hiring, layoff and Overtime

• Advantages– Highly economical

• Disadvantage– Hiring and firing practices may affect social

and employee relations

• Some other plan with smaller fluctuations in employment may be sought

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Comparing Plans 1 & 2

Plan 3: Subcontracting as a source

• Reduces fluctuations in workforce• Uses overtime, seasonal inventories and

subcontracting to absorb demand fluctuations

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Plan 3: Subcontracting as a source

• Involves:– 0 to 84 days – Produce 250 units/day– 85 to 128 days – Produce 350 units/day

• Hire 100 workers (250 � 350)

– 129 to 148 days – Produce 410 units/day• 60 units/day overtime• 1700 units subcontracted

– 149 to 171 days – Produce 370 units/day• 20 units/day overtime

Plan 3: Subcontracting as a source

– 172 to 182 days – Produce 410 units/day• 60 units/day overtime• 1380 units subcontracted

– 183 to 204 days – Produce 173 units/day• 23 units/day overtime• Layoff 100 workers (350 � 350)

– 205 to 244 days – Produce 250 units/day

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Plan 3: Subcontracting as a source

• Seasonal Inventories reduced to 1301– $65, 070

• Employment fluctuations are modest– $40, 000

• Only 2826 units are produced on overtime– $28, 260

• 3080 units are subcontracted at $15/unit– $46,200

• Total Cost = $179, 530

Plan 3: Subcontracting as a source

• Even though Plan 3 has less employee fluctuations, it may still be considered severe, and other plans can be sough to reduce this even further

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Summary

Cumulative Graphs• Sequence of Plots

– 1 � Cumulative Production requirements– 2 � Cumulative Maximum requirements

• Production requirements + Buffer Stock

• Any feasible production program (meeting demand and inventory requirements), must fall completely above the maximum requirements line

• The vertical distance between the program proposed curves and the cumulative max. requirements curve represents the seasonal inventory at each period

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Cumulative Graphs• Advantage

– Alternative programs can be visualized over a broad planning horizon

• Disadvantage– Is static, and does not seek to optimize cost or

profit

• Should be used only to compare different types of programs

Cumulative Graphs