Syllabus academic year 2008/2009
(Created 2008-07-17.)
MANAGEMENT OF PRODUCTION AND INVENTORY SYSTEMSMIO331

Higher education credits: 9. Grading scale: TH. Level: A (Second level). Language of instruction: The course will be given in English. Optional for: I4lp, M3, INEK4. Course coordinator: Associate Professor Johan Marklund, Johan.Marklund@iml.lth.se, Produktionsekonomi. Prerequisites: MIO012/MIOA01 Managerial Economics Basic Course, MIO030 Production and Inventory Control, MIO310 Operations Research Basic Course, FMS035 Mathematical Statistics Basic Course. Recommended prerequisits: MIO040 Managerial Economics Advanced Course, MIO051 Production Management, MIO060 Quality and Maintenance Management. Assessment: Take home exams/assignments in production and inventory control, and project management, together with a live, relatively large, industry project conducted at an industrial company. The final grade in the course is a synthesis of the performance across these different activities. The examination is designed to assess the students’ ability to independently solve loosely structured problems typically found in a production inventory environment. An important aspect is for the students to clearly communicate the results and how the problems are solved, both orally, in well structured presentations, and in writing by producing well structured technical reports. Parts: 2. Home page: http://www.iml.lth.se/pm/.

Aim
The course aims to deepen the students’ knowledge and understanding of methods for developing the management of production and inventory systems, both from a theoretical and applied perspective. An important aspect is to enhance the students’ ability to structure and manage complex tasks, processes and assignments in the form of projects.

Concrete objectives are to provide the students with:

Knowledge and understanding
For a passing grade the student must

For the section on advanced quantitative methods for production and inventory control the above means that the student is required to:

For the section on project management the above means that the student is required to:

For the live company based project, the above means that the student is required to:

Skills and abilities
For a passing grade the student must

in area of quantitative models for production and inventory control, have the skills and abilities to independently formulate, solve, and use relevant quantitative models for analysis and control. Concrete areas and model types that the student should master include:

Moreover, the student must be able to use established terms and concepts to clearly communicate problem formulation and interpretation of quantitative production and inventory models. After completing the course, the student should be able to independently read and understand literature in the field and complement his/her knowledge as required.

in area of project management:

Moreover, for a passing grade, the student must in the live company project show ability to independently conduct investigative projects in the area of production and logistics. This involves skills and abilities in framing and solving large unstructured problems. Important aspects are problem formulation, identifying project objectives, choose appropriate methods, and performing in depth analysis. Creating a foundation for the analysis requires skills in performing literature studies and field work to collect measurements, construct surveys and performing interviews. To succeed with a project of this type requires skills in project management. Furthermore, reporting project progress and results requires skills in oral and written presentation techniques.

Contents
The course consists of three integrated parts or sections:

Methods and principles for effective project management

This part of the course deals with different types of projects and project processes, requirement engineering, project planning, organisation and control of projects, team work, the role of the project leader, and projects as part of the firm’s business development.

Advanced methods for control of production and inventory systems

This part of the course deals with advanced quantitative methods for control of single- and multi-echelon production and inventory systems.

Live company based project in the area of production management and logistics

This project provides the students with the opportunity to apply the theoretical knowledge they have acquired in past and present courses in the field of production management and logistics. In the project, the students are confronted with real problems, which require choice of appropriate models to analyse the situation. It also requires development and proposal of suitable solution approaches and improvement strategies. The work is reported in a detailed and well structured technical report.

Section on project management

This part of the course provides the students with the foundation effective project management. During the course the students will work with two projects where their skills in project management can be put to use, first a fictitious project to hone their skills in applying the studied theory on project work and project management, and then a large live company project in the field of production management and logistics (see description below).

Project management treats the project as a component in the firm’s business development. Today’s business projects require integration between the product development activities and the development of the manufacturing system for a certain product or product family. Project specification is an important tool in project management for defining the project identity. The course treats concepts as project processes, demand specification, project preparation, project control, project economy, team work, project organisation, the role of the project leader, project termination and learning experiences.

Introduction to project management

Project types, the project process, business projects, the project specification

Project requirements and planning

Project types, requirement engineering, objectives, project planning

Project control

Project economy, concept phase, system design, detailed design, project control.

Project structure

Project plan, project organisation, risk, project evaluation.

Project communication

Project documentation, communication, business law, procurement, commissioning, project termination, Capability Maturity Model.

Production development projects

Project process for production development

Section on advanced quantitative models for production and inventory control

This part of the course aims at deepening and expanding the students’ knowledge in quantitative modelling of production and inventory systems both from a theoretical and applied perspective. The starting point for the content treated in the course is the theories and methods studied in the course MIO030 Production and Inventory Control. We discuss challenges associated with applying quantitative models in practice, for example, when it comes to determining cost parameters and distribution fitting.

Live company based project in production management or logistics

The live company based project offers the opportunity to apply the theoretical knowledge acquired in past and present courses in production management or logistics. The choice of production inventory system depends on the production environment, the requirements and prioritised criteria. In the project, the students are confronted with real business problems, which require them to analyse, propose and develop appropriate methods for solving the problem at hand. The exact nature of the problems facing the students vary with the companies and the projects they offer. The projects are carried out in groups of 3-4 students. The students are encouraged (but not required) to use their own contacts in industry and design a project that fits their interests. All projects needs to be approved by the course supervising team before inclusion in the course. The project work and the obtained results are documented in a detailed technical report and presented orally to the class both during the project and after it is completed.

Literature
Axsäter S. Inventory Control, Second edition. Springer, New York, 2006.
Cleland, D & Ireland, L., Project Management. Strategic design and implementation. McGraw-Hill, 2002.
Course compendium
Scientific research papers:
A1 Hopp, W.J. and M.L. Spearman (2004), “To Pull or Not to Pull: What is the Question?”, Manufacturing and Service Operations Management, Vol. 6 (Spring 2004), pp. 133-148.
A2 Spearman, M.L. and M.A. Zazanis (1992), “Push and Pull Production Systems: Issues and Comparisons”, Operations Research, Vol. 40 (3), pp 521-532.
A3 Hopp, W.J., Spearman, M.L. and I. Duenyas (1993), “Economic Production Quotas for Pull Manufacturing Systems”, IIE Transactions, Vol 25 (2), pp. 71-79.
A4 Krajewski, L.J., King, B.E., Ritzman L.P. and D.S. Wong (1987), “Kanban, MRP and Shaping the Manufacturing Environment”, Management Science, Vol. 33 (1), pp. 39-57.
A5 Spearman, M.L. and R.Q. Zhang (1999), “Optimal Lead Time Policies”, Management Science, Vol. 45 (2), pp. 290-295.
A6 Andersson J. and J Marklund (2000), “Decentralized Inventory Control in a Two-Level Distribution System”, European Journal of Operational Research, Vol. 127 (3), pp.483-506.

Parts

Code: 0107. Name: Take Home Assignments.
Higher education credits: 3. Grading scale: TH. Assessment: Take home exams/assignments in production and inventory control, and project management, together with a live, relatively large, industry project conducted at an industrial company. The final grade in the course is a synthesis of the performance across these different activities. Contents: The assignment deals with: advanced quantitative methods for control of single- and multi-echelon production and inventory systems. a fictitious project to hone their skills in applying the studied theory on project work and project management.

Code: 0207. Name: Project.
Higher education credits: 6. Grading scale: UG. Assessment: Take home exams/assignments in production and inventory control, and project management, together with a live, relatively large, industry project conducted at an industrial company. The final grade in the course is a synthesis of the performance across these different activities. Contents: The project provides the students with the opportunity to apply the theoretical knowledge they have acquired in past and present courses in the field of production management and logistics. In the project, the students are confronted with real problems, which require choice of appropriate models to analyse the situation. It also requires development and proposal of suitable solution approaches and improvement strategies. The work is reported in a detailed and well structured technical report.