Facility Location
PRESENTED BY:-
SHAUNAK NADIG – 44
ASHWINKUMAR POOJARY – 09
MRINAL SANDBHOR – 31
RACHIT GOR – 42
ATANU MANDAL – 10
E.G. PRASANT – 16
LOGO
FLOW
INTRODUCTION
TATA NANO PLANT LOCATION
INTEL PLANT LOCATION IN COSTA RICA
ANALYSING TECHNIQUES
Factor Rating Method
Cost Volume Analysis
The Centre of Gravity Method
Load distance Method
Geographic Information System (GIS)
CONCLUSION
Location Decisions
Facility location is the process of
determining geographic sites for a firm’s
operations.
Location decisions affect processes
throughout the organization.
Marketing must assess how the location will appeal
to customers; possibly opening new markets.
Human Resources must be attuned to the firm’s
hiring and training needs.
Accounting and Finance must evaluate costing.
Operations needs to be able to meet current
customer demand and provide the right amount of
customer contact.
Factors Affecting
Location Decisions
Managers must weigh many factors when
assessing the desirability of particular locations.
The factor must be sensitive to location.
The factor must have a high impact on the
company’s ability to meet its goals.
Steps in choosing location
Importance of location
Alternative location
Evaluate all locations
Select a location
Company Logo
Competitiveness of a location
Three tier model
Country Competitiveness
Govt. budget & regulation Quality of judicial &
political institutions
Labour Sector Competitiveness Qlty of
Mkt. Flexibility Infrastructure Openness to
Quality Intl. trade &
Company Competitiveness of Tech. finance
Ability to design, produce, & mkt products
superior to competitors, Qlty. of business mgmt.
Extent to which a business sector offers potential for growth
and attractive return on investment
Development
of financial Mkt. Extent to which a national environment is
Conducive or detrimental to business
Mahadevan (2007), “Operations Management: Theory & Practice”, © Pearson Education
Types of Facilities
Site Selection: Where to Locate
Copyright 2006 John Wiley &
Supplement 7-7
Sons, Inc.
Factors in Heavy Manufacturing
Location
Construction costs
Land costs
Raw material and finished goods shipment modes
Proximity to raw materials
Utilities
Labor availability
Types of Facilities
Heavy-manufacturing facilities
large, require a lot of space, and are expensive
Light-industry facilities
smaller, cleaner plants and usually less costly
Retail and service facilities
smallest and least costly
Factors in Light Industry
Location
Transportation costs
Proximity to markets
Frequency of delivery required by customer
Land costs
Easily accessible geographic region
Education and training capabilities
Factors in Retail Location
Proximity to customers
Location is everything
TYPES OF FACILITIES
MANUFACTURING SERVICE FACILITY
FACILITY
Physical proximity to Physical proximity to
customers is not customers is necessary.
necessary.
Being near to
Being near to competitors may not be
competitors may be desirable.
desirable.
E.g.- Fast food
E.g.- Steel & furniture restaurants
Market related issues Cost related issues
Market for products and services Wage rates
Raw Material availability Transportation costs
Number and proximity of suppliers Taxes and other tariff issues
Availability of skilled labour
Quality of Infrastructure
Regulatory & Policy issues Other issues
Government & Economic stability Culture
Quality of legal and other institutions Climate
Trading blocks and trading agreements Quality of Life
TATA NANO
PLANT LOCATION
C A S E S T U D Y
OBJECTIVES
To setup a manufacturing plant in India with a view:-
To produce a vehicle that would be the least
expensive production car in the world.
Aiming for a starting price of ` 100,000 or
approximately US$ 2300.
India is the potential and leading market in
automobile industry.
To compete with the foreign car manufacturers.
Why was Singur initially selected?
Political
Cheap Labour
Concessional Power
Subsidy on Land with
Soft Loan
Tax Paybacks
Competitors
Connectivity to a metro
city, railway station and
a national highway.
Durgapur Expressway
Why made TATA’s to leave Singur ?
Political Factors
Community Factors
Then why not these?
Sri Lanka
Kerala and Andra Pradesh
Jharkhand and Orissa
Why Pantnagar, Uttaranchal
Already has a plant of its own – Ace
Connected to many States.
Connected to National Highway, railways
and international airports
Concession to power, electricity, tax etc.
Water and Power Supply
Financial Incentives
Less Competition due to other industries
Shift of
TATA Nano Plant
from
Singur to Sanand
New Factory Location - Sanand
Gujarat – a proactive state
General Population of the State in favor of
industrialization.
Close proximity to the Ports and Seas
Close Connectivity to National Highway
Favorable Climate
Community
FACILITY LOCATION of
Comparison in between Brazil and Costa Rica to set
up a plant location
Intel’s plans to operate an assembly and testing
facility in Costa Rica
INTEL started it’s operation in Nov 13 ,1998
INTEL ‘S REQUIREMENT
Human resource
Reasonable cost structure.
A “pro-business” environment.
Logistics and manufacturing lead time.
Fast track permit process.
Stable economic & political condition.
Costa Rica’s Competitiveness
Corporate tax rate
Labor flexibility
Advanced telecommunication
Advanced engineering education
Excellent infrastructure.
Contd…..
Geography & demography
Education (96% literacy rate)
Economic openness and liberalization
(CAFTA)
BMW Case Study
ANALYSING TECHNIQUES
Factor Rating Method.
Cost Volume Analysis.
Centre of Gravity
Load distance Method
Geographic information System
FACTOR RATING METHOD
Popular because a wide variety of factors can be
included in the analysis.
Six steps in the method :-
1.Develop a list of relevant factors called critical
success factors
2.Assign a weight to each factor
3.Develop a scale for each factor
4.Score each location for each factor
5.Multiply score by weights for each factor for
each location
6.Recommend the location with the highest point
score
Critical success weight Spartanburg Florida
factor
Labour Cost 15 7 8
Promixity to 40 8 8
Market
Land Cost 25 9 7
Transportation 20 8 7
COST-VOLUME ANALYSIS
When the fixed and
variable costs for
each site differ,
Cost- volume
analysis can be
used to identify
the location with
the lowest cost.
Method of cost-volume analysis
used for industrial locations.
Three steps in the method :-
1.Determine fixed and variable
costs for each location
2. Plot the cost for each location
3.Select location with lowest total
cost for expected production
volume
Example
Clean-Clothes Cleaners is
considering four possible sites for
its new operation. They expect to
clean 10,000 garments. The table
and graph below are used for the
analysis.
Example
Total Production Cost = (Fixed Cost) + (variable unit
cost) x (annual production volume)
ExampleCALCULATION
9.6 Using Break-Even Analysis
Location Fixed Cost Variable Cost Total Cost
A $350,000 $ 5(10,000) $400,000
B $170,000 $25(10,000) $420,000
C $100,000 $40(10,000) $500,000
D $250,000 $20(10,000) $450,000
Example
GRAPH OF
COST Vs
QUANTITY
Example
This graphic shows that annual production
cost changes with different production
volumes.
If the expected annual production volume is
below 4500 units, then choose site C.
If the expected annual production volume is
between 4500 and 9000 units, then choose
site B.
If the expected annual production volume is
over 9000 units, then choose site C.
THE CENTRE OF
GRAVITY METHOD
The Centre of Gravity Method
The center of gravity method is
used to find a location that
minimizes the sum of transportation
cost in between new facility and old
facilities.
Transportation cost is assumed to
be a linear function of the number
of units shipped and the traveling
distance.
The Centre Of Gravity Method
The location of the firm’s existing facilities are
converted into x and y coordinates.
If the quantities to be shipped to every location are
equal, the coordinates of center of gravity are:-
The Centre Of Gravity Method
The Centre Of Gravity Method
The Centre Of Gravity Method
The Centre Of Gravity Method
If the quantities to be shipped to every
location are not equal, the coordinates
of center of gravity are:-
The Centre Of Gravity Method
Company Logo
The Centre Of Gravity Method
Cx : x coordinate for new location
Cy : y coordinate for new location
i: index for existing locations
n: total number of existing locations
xi: x coordinate of existing ith location
yi: y coordinate of existing ith location
Vi: Quantity to be shipped to destination
The COG Method-Basic Steps
Consider
a) Location of Market
b) Volume of goods shipped to those market
c) Shipping Cost
Place existing locations on a coordinate grid
Calculate X & Y co-ordinates for center of gravity
The COG Method-Basic Steps Contd..
Assume cost is directly proportional to straight
line distance & volume shipped
Averages distances weighted by the amount to be
shipped
Airline distance (diagonal of triangle):need not
to consider the curvature of earths surface
City block distance (base +height of triangle)
Finds location of distribution center that
minimizes distribution costs
The COG Method Example
To decide where to build a new DC for Motorola.
It needs to serve wholesalers in Reno, Dallas, and
Chicago.
Locate these cities on an unscientific, rectangular
grid.
Grid must maintain relative distances, but X and Y
grids could be different.
The Center of Gravity Method
City Demand
Reno is at 17, 55 100
Fort Worth is at 78, 20 90
Chicago is at 110, 65. 120
Demand is TL/month
The Center of Gravity Method
d W ix i
17 * 100 78 * 90 110 * 120
CX i
W i
i 100 90 120
1,700 7 ,020 13 , 200 21,920
CX 70 .7
d W 90 * 110 * 120
ix i
d iy W i
310 310
CX i
CY i
55 * 100 20 * 90 65 * 120
W 90 110 120
i
i W i 100 90 120
i C 5 ,500 1,800 7 ,800 15 ,100 48 . 7
Y
310 310
Compromise Solution
Closest town is Sharon Springs, KN
Population 872mn
30 miles from I-70.
Probably not a good choice
Salina, KN puts us at I-70 and I-35
North Platte NE is at I-80 and 83.
Access to Dallas less convenient
Finalizing City
Go where other warehouses are
More choice in pre-built buildings
Cheaper, easier to build a new one
More trucks to and from town, means more
carriers there, means cheaper rates.
Backhaul situation
Get estimates of inbound, outbound
trucking costs.
Provide lists of loads per year to each
destination, from each source
The Center of Gravity Method
This method only considers the
distances traveled. It does not
consider the other factors such
as the availability of roads on
the selected location.
Therefore, applying solely this
method may not be applicable
in every cases.
LOAD-DISTANCE
TECHNIQUE
Load-Distance Technique
Compute (Load x Distance) for
each site
Choose site with lowest (Load x
Distance)
Distance can be actual or
straight-line
Load-Distance Calculations
n
LD = ld i i
i=1
where,
LD = load-distance value
li = load expressed as a weight, number of trips or units
being shipped from proposed site and location i
di = distance between proposed site and location i
di = (xi - x)2 + (yi - y)2
where,
(x,y) = coordinates of proposed site
(xi , yi) = coordinates of existing facility
Load-Distance: Example
Potential Sites Suppliers
Site X Y A B C D
1 360 180 X 200 100 250 500
2 420 450 Y 200 500 600 300
3 250 400 Wt 75 105 135 60
Compute distance from each site to each supplier
Site 1 dA = (xA - x1)2 + (yA - y1)2 = (200-360)2 + (200-180)2 = 161.2
dB = (xB - x1)2 + (yB - y1)2 = (100-360)2 + (500-180)2 = 412.3
dC = 434.2 dD = 184.4
Load-Distance: Example (cont.)
Site 2 dA = 333 dB = 323.9 dC = 226.7 dD = 170
Site 3 dA = 206.2 dB = 180.4 dC = 200 dD = 269.3
Compute load-distance
n
LD =
i=1
li di
Site 1 = (75)(161.2) + (105)(412.3) + (135)(434.2) + (60)(184.4) = 125,089
Site 2 = (75)(333) + (105)(323.9) + (135)(226.7) + (60)(170) = 99,791
Site 3 = (75)(206.2) + (105)(180.3) + (135)(200) + (60)(269.3) = 77,555*
Geographic Information
Systems and Location Decisions
Geographic information system (GIS) is a system of
computer software, hardware, and data that the
firm’s personnel can use to manipulate, analyze, and
present information relevant to a location decision.
Features:
Store databases
Display maps
Create models that can take information from
existing datasets, apply analytic functions, and
write results into new derived datasets.
Types of Data in GIS
Raster- Any type of digital image represented by
reducible and enlargeable grids
Vector- Considering those features which geometrical
shapes(Points, Lines, Polygons)
Data Acquisitions
Survey
GPS
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Laser Rangefinder
Photogrammetry
USES
Geography Precision agriculture
Urban planning
Cartography
Emergency
Remote sensing management
Navigation
Land surveying
Aerial video
Public utility
management Localized search
engines
Natural resource
management
GIS and Site Selection
in the Petroleum Industry
Petroleum Exploration
Production
Managing Facilities
Pipeline Management
Using GIS to Identify
Starbucks Locations
The Starbuck store addresses within 20 miles of
Hamilton, Ontario were obtained from the Starbucks
Web site, and imported into MapPoint.
These store locations are denoted on maps by yellow
dots. Then demographics that come with MapPoint were
overlaid on the map.
On the first map, note that Oakville has more store
locations than Hamilton even though it has lower
population density, suggesting that store location is not
being driven by population density alone.
The second map shows the demographics by average
per capita household income. Note that in this case, the
store locations are based in more affluent areas.
Starbucks
locations
CONCLUSION
THANK YOU