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MEL751: Module On Theory of Constraints

The document provides an overview of the Theory of Constraints (TOC), a management philosophy developed by Eliyahu Goldratt. It discusses key aspects of TOC including identifying bottlenecks, exploiting constraints, and subordinating all other processes to the constraint. The goal of TOC is to maximize throughput by keeping the constraint continuously utilized at its fullest capacity. It relies on concepts like the drum-buffer-rope to synchronize operations with the constraint.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
107 views

MEL751: Module On Theory of Constraints

The document provides an overview of the Theory of Constraints (TOC), a management philosophy developed by Eliyahu Goldratt. It discusses key aspects of TOC including identifying bottlenecks, exploiting constraints, and subordinating all other processes to the constraint. The goal of TOC is to maximize throughput by keeping the constraint continuously utilized at its fullest capacity. It relies on concepts like the drum-buffer-rope to synchronize operations with the constraint.

Uploaded by

Loü
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MEL751:

Module on Theory of
Constraints

1
Opening remarks about “Theory of
Constraints”
 Developed by Eliyahu Goldratt in the mid 1980’s with
his business novel The Goal.
 Has a close relationship with other modern techniques
 Just-in-Time
 Manufacturing Resource Planning
 Quality Management, Six-Sigma
 Activity-Based Management.

2
Brief abut Goldratt

 Born in Israel in the late 1940’s.


 Bachelor’s degree in Physics.
 Masters and Doctorate degrees in Philosophy.
 Founder of a production scheduling software company.
 Has helped many companies such as: GM, RCA, Kodak,
Westinghouse, Philips, etc.
 Wrote several books:
 The Goal.
 The Race.
 What is this thing called TOC?
 Critical Chain.

3
Goldratt’s “The Goal”

 Brief overview:
 Midsize company having difficulty shipping products on time.
 Managed by a plant manager desperate to turn things around.
 With the help of a Physicist, the plant manager is able to locate the bottleneck
and find a solution.

 Symptoms noted in the book:


 Obsolete inventory.
 Low inventory turnover and high amount of inventory in storage.
 Idle workers or machines.
 Machine breakdown.
 A large amount of scrap pieces.
 A large amount of retooling and rework needed.

4
Brief about “Theory of Constraints”

 Looks at the entire supply chain and synchronizes the chain to


achieve ultimate performance.
 Based on two assumptions:
 Every organization has a set of processes working together to achieve a
common goal.
 Every process has a [single] constraint that limits it from higher
performance.

 Typical constraints: Time, Capacity, Materials, Human Resources,


Capital Resources, Financial Resources

5
Types of Constraints

 Physical Constraints
 Physical, tangible; easy to recognize as constraint. Machine
capacity, material availability, space availability, etc.

 Market Constraints
 Demand for company’s products and services is less than
capacity of organization, or not in desired proportion.

 Policy Constraints
 Not physical in nature. Includes entire system of measures and
methods and even mindset that governs the strategic and tactical
decisions of the company.
Policy Constraints
 Mindset Constraints
 A constraint if thought process or culture of the
organization blocks design & implementation of
measures & methods required to achieve goals.

 Measures Constraints
 A constraint if they drive behaviors that are
incongruous with organizational goals.

 Methods Constraints
 A constraint when procedures and techniques
used result in actions incompatible with goals.
Theory of Constraints

 Significance of bottlenecks
 Maximum speed of the process is the speed of
the slowest operation
 Any improvements will be wasted unless the
bottleneck is relieved
 Bottlenecks must be identified and improved if the
process is to be improved

8
TOC and Systems Thinking

 TOC promotes “Systems Thinking”: global


optimization (not local optimization).

 The performance measures advocated by


TOC are global measures.
The Theory of Constraints

 The Theory of Constraints (TOC) is based


on two premises:

 The Goal of a business is to make more


money, … in the present and in the future.

 A system’s constraint(s) determine its output.


TOC Performance Measures
 Throughput (T): The rate at which the
system generates money through sales.
 Inventory (I): All the money invested in
purchasing things needed by the system to
sell its products.
 Operating Expenses (OE): All the money
the system spends, turning inventory into
throughput.
Relating TOC Measures to Traditional
Measures
 T = Sale Price - Direct Material Cost

 OE = Direct Labor Cost + Overhead

 Net Profit = T - OE
 Return on = Net Profit =( T - OE ) / I
Investment inventory
 Inventory = throughput
Turns inventory
The Throughput World: Process of
TOC
 Step 1: Identify the System’s
Constraint(s)
 Step 2: Decide how to Exploit the
System’s Constraints
 Step 3: Subordinate Everything Else to
that Decision
 Step 4: Elevate the System’s Constraints

 Step 5: If a Constraint Was Broken in


Previous Steps, Go to Step 1
How can we get the most from
Physical Constraints?
 Techniques for optimizing capacity constraints:
 Eliminate periods of idle time
 Reduce setup time and run time per unit
 Improve quality control
 Reduce the workload
 Purchase additional capacity
Steps in the TOC Process

 Identify the system constraints


 Internal  External
 Process constraints  Material constraints
 Machine time, etc.  Insufficient materials
 Policy constraints  Market constraints
 No overtime, etc.  Insufficient demand

 How is a constraint identified?


15
Steps in the TOC Process

 Subordinate everything else to the preceding


decision
 Plan production to keep constraint working at
100%
 May need to change performance measures to
conform upstream activities to the “rope” speed

16
Steps in the TOC Process

 Alleviate the constraint


 Determine how to increase its capacity

 Repeat the process


 Always a new constraint

17
Theory of Constraints
 Purpose is to identify bottlenecks or other
constraints and exploit them to the extent
possible
 Identification of constraints allows management to
take action to alleviate the constraint in the future
 Reduce cycle time
 Time from receipt of customer order to shipment
 Improve manufacturing cycle efficiency (MCE)
 Processing time / total cycle time

18
Theory of Constraints

 Assumes current constraints cannot be


changed in the short-run
 What should be produced now, with current
resources, to maximize profits?
 Question cannot be answered by traditional accounting
methods

19
Theory of Constraints

 Management tool, not an accounting tool


 Not used to determine inventory values
 Not used to allocate overhead to inventory

 Does indicate how to use available resources


most effectively

20
The Need for TOC

 Standard costing
 Can promote undesirable behavior
 Work to keep people busy
 Local optimization
 Inventory is produced regardless of need

 Does indicate what it should cost to produce a


product

21
The Need for TOC
 Does not indicate which products will maximize
profits given the constraints
 Doesn’t take constraints into account
 Does not consider the demands each item places on
limited resources

22
The Need for TOC

 Theory of Constraints
 Uses linear programming to determine best use of
limited resources
 Indicates what should be produced and in what
quantities

23
Theory of Constraints

 Constraining resource must be maximized


 All other operations must be geared toward this
goal
 May require suboptimization in other areas
 Upstream operations must provide only what the
constraint can handle
 Downstream operations will only receive what the
constraint can put out

24
Theory of Constraints
 Constraint must be kept operating at its full
capacity
 If not, the entire process slows further

 Focus is on maximizing throughput


 Sales – totally variable costs
 All other costs treated as fixed operational
expenses
 Cannot vary much in the short-run

25
Theory of Constraints

 Based on the concepts of drum, buffer and


ropes
 Drum
 Output of the constraint is the drumbeat
 Sets the tempo for other operations
 Tells upstream operations what to produce
 Tells downstream operations what to expect

26
Theory of Constraints
 Buffer
 Stockpile of work in process in front of constraint
 Precaution to keep constraint running if upstream
operations are interrupted

 Rope
 Sequence of processes prior to and including the
constraint
 Want to “pull” the rope at the maximum speed
 Speed of the constraint

27
Evaluation of TOC

 Advantages
 Improves capacity decisions in the short-run
 Avoids build up of inventory
 Aids in process understanding
 Avoids local optimization
 Improves communication between departments

28
Evaluation of TOC

 Disadvantages
 Negative impact on non-constrained areas
 Diverts attention from other areas that may be the next
constraint
 Temptation to reduce capacity

29
Evaluation of TOC

 Ignores long-run considerations


 Introduction of new products
 Continuous improvement in non-constrained
areas
 May lead organization away from strategy
 Not a substitute for other accounting
methods

30
Challenges

 Identifying goals?
 Identifying bottlenecks?
 How to apply this theory to service context?
 How to extend the logic to unorganized
sector, say , especially in India?

31
Thanks

32

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