CH 1 Key
CH 1 Key
1. Operations managers are responsible for assessing consumer wants and needs and selling and
promoting the organization's goods or services.
FALSE - Operation managers are not responsible for promoting goods/services.
2. Often, the collective success or failure of companies' operations functions will impact the
ability of a nation to compete with other nations.
TRUE - A nation is often only as competitive as its companies.
3. Companies are either producing goods or delivering services. This means that only one of the
two types of operations management strategies are used.
FALSE - Most systems involve a blend of goods and services.
4. Operations, marketing, and finance function independently of each other in most
organizations.
FALSE - Operations, marketing and finance are naturally dependent upon one another.
5. The greater the degree of customer involvement, the more challenging the design and
management of operations.
TRUE - Greater customer involvement leads to more complexity in the design and management
of operations.
6. Goods producing organizations are not involved in service activities.
FALSE - Most systems involve a blend of goods and services.
7. Service operations require additional inventory because of the unpredictability of consumer
demand.
FALSE - Service operations cannot use inventory as a hedge against unpredictable demand.
8. The value of outputs is measured by the prices customers are willing to pay for goods or
services.
TRUE - Customers' willingness to pay for goods or services sets the value of these outputs.
9. The use of models will guarantee the best possible decisions.
FALSE - Models are useful, but their use does not guarantee the best decisions.
10. People who work in the field of operations should have skills that include both knowledge
and people skills.
TRUE - Operations management requires a blend of knowledge and people skills.
11. Assembly lines achieved productivity but at the expense of standard of living.
FALSE - Productivity and standard of living go hand in hand.
12. The operations manager has primary responsibility for making operations system design
decisions, such as system capacity and location of facilities.
FALSE - The operations manager plays a role in these decisions but is not primarily responsible
for them.
13. The word "technology" is used only to refer to "information technology".
FALSE - Technology also refers to the technology involved in resource transformations.
14. Value added' by definition is always a positive number since 'added' implies increases.
FALSE - Some transformations result in the output being worth less than the inputs.
15. Service often requires greater labor content, whereas manufacturing is more capital intensive.
TRUE - Service operations tend to be more labor-intensive than manufacturing.
16. Measurement of productivity in service is more straightforward than in manufacturing since
it is not necessary to take into account the cost of materials.
FALSE - Materials cost must be considered in services as well.
17. Special-purpose technology is a common way of offering increased customization in
manufacturing or services without taking on additional labor costs.
FALSE - Special-purpose technology typically reduces costs through standardization.
18. One concern in the design of production systems is the degree of standardization.
TRUE - How standardized outputs will be is a critical consideration in the system design
question.
19. Most people encounter operations only in profit-making organizations.
FALSE - Operations are also relevant to not-for-profit organizations such as the Red Cross.
20. Service involves a much higher degree of customer contact than manufacturing.
TRUE - Customer contact tends to be much higher in services.
21. A systems approach emphasizes interrelationships among subsystems, but its main theme is
that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts.
TRUE - Optimizing the performance of individual subsystems does not guarantee optimal
performance from the overall system.
23. Operations managers, who usually use quantitative approaches, are not really concerned with
ethical decision-making.
FALSE - Ethics issues are touching on all areas of management, including operations.
24. The optimal solutions produced by quantitative techniques should always be evaluated in
terms of the larger framework.
TRUE - Quantitative techniques have limitations that must be considered.
25. Managers should most often rely on quantitative techniques for important decisions since
quantitative approaches result in more accurate decisions.
FALSE - Just as other techniques do, quantitative techniques have limitations.
26. Many operations management decisions can be described as tradeoffs.
TRUE - Managing tradeoffs is the essence of operations management.
27. A systems approach means that we concentrate on efficiency within a subsystem and thereby
assure overall efficiency.
FALSE - Subsystem efficiency doesn't necessarily translate into overall efficiency.
28. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, goods were produced primarily by craftsmen or their
apprentices using custom made parts.
TRUE - After the Industrial Revolution, more standardized approaches became common.
29. Elton Mayo's "Hawthorne Experiment" was the focal point of the Human Relations
Movement, which emphasized the importance of the human element in job design.
TRUE - The Hawthorne Experiments were the beginning of the Human Relations Movement.
30. Among Ford's many contributions was the introduction of mass production, using the concept
of interchangeable parts and division of labor.
D. quality.
E. flexibility.
Union activity can affect a firm's technology choices, but not the other way around.
43. Measurements taken at various points in the transformation process for control purposes are
called:
A. plans
B. directions
C. controls
D. feedback
E. budgets
Feedback is used to monitor and improve processes.
44. Budgeting, analysis of investment proposals, and provision of funds are activities associated
with the
_______ function.
A. operation
B. marketing
C. purchasing
D. finance
E. internal audit
These are the primary tasks for the finance function.
45. Which one of the following would not generally be classified under the heading of
transformation?
A. assembling
B. teaching
C. staffing
D. farming
E. consulting
Staffing doesn't involve transforming resources so much as it involves acquiring them.
46. Manufacturing work sent to other countries is called:
A. downsized
B. outsourced
C. internationalization
D. vertical integration
E. entrepreneurial ship
Outsourcing is increasingly a part of operations management.
47. Product design and process selection are examples of _______ decisions.
A. financial
B. tactical
C. system design
D. system operation
E. forecasting
These major decisions affect decisions made at lower levels.
48. The responsibilities of the operations manager are:
A. planning, organizing, staffing, procuring, and reviewing
B. planning, organizing, staffing, directing, and controlling
C. forecasting, designing, planning, organizing, and controlling
D. forecasting, designing, operating, procuring, and reviewing
E. designing and operating
C. controlling
D. budgeting
E. disciplining
Controls are used to maintain performance.
60. Which of the following does not relate to system design?
A. altering the system capacity
B. location of facilities
C. inventory management
D. selection and acquisition of equipment
E. physical arrangement of departments
Inventory management is a system operation decision area.
61. Taking a systems viewpoint with regard to operations in today's environment increasingly
leads decision-makers to consider ______________ in response to the ___________.
A. flexibility; pressure to be more efficient
B. offshoring; need to promote domestic production
C. sustainability; threat of global warming
D. technology; impact of random variation
E. forecasting; stabilization of demand
Sustainability is a relatively recent operations management consideration.
62. Some companies attempt to maximize the revenue they receive from fixed operating capacity
by influencing demands through price manipulation. This is an example of
__________________:
A. Illegal price discrimination
B. Collusion
C. Volume analysis
D. Revenue management
E. Outsourcing
Revenue management is used to ensure that as much perishable capacity as possible is sold.
63. Which of the following is not an ongoing trend in manufacturing?
A. globalization
B. quality improvement
C. flexibility and agility
D. mass production for greater economies of scale
E. technological advances
Manufacturers are moving away from mass production for economies of scale.
64. Which of the following is not a benefit of using models in decision making?
A. They provide a standardized format for analyzing a problem.
B. They serve as a consistent tool for evaluation.
C. They are easy to use and less expensive than dealing with the actual situation.
D. All of the above are benefits.
E. None of the above is a benefit.
Models are useful tools for making decisions without confronting the actual situation with all of
its complexity.
65. Modern firms increasingly rely on other firms to supply goods and services instead of doing
these tasks themselves. This increased level of _____________ is leading to increased emphasis
on ____________ management.
A. outsourcing; supply chain
B. offshoring; lean
C. downsizing; total quality
D. optimizing; inventory
E. internationalization; intercultural
Supply chain management takes a more systemic view of the firm, its operations, and its
suppliers.
66. Operations and sales are the two ________ functions in businesses.
A. strategic
B. tactical
C. support
D. value-adding
E. line
Others are support functions.
67. Marketing depends on operations for information regarding ___________.
A. productivity
B. lead time
C. cash flow
D. budgeting
E. corporate intelligence
Marketing uses lead time information to make promises to customers.
68. Two widely used metrics of variation are the __________ and the _________.
A. mean; standard deviation
B. productivity ratio; correlation
C. standardized mean; assignable deviation
D. randomized mean; standardized deviation