Deck 7: Managing Capacity

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Question
Management of demand and management of resources constitute the two broad content areas of capacity management.
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Question
Capacity is the minimum amount of output that a system can produce in a sustained manner over a year.
Question
Capacity management is an operational activity that primarily focuses on the intelligent utilization of capacity.
Question
Capacity planning is a tactical task that involves the current development and acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs.
Question
Price changes are useful ways for shifting demand to meet available capacity of a facility.
Question
Premium pricing can be used to effectively wean out low-profit customers during off-peak capacity utilization times and bring demand down.
Question
Process management can increase capacity by redesigning work flows.
Question
Capacity management is not a source of competitive advantage since any well-established firm can match supply and demand.
Question
Yield management parses capacity into separate pricing segments in an effort to maximize profits or revenues.
Question
Maximizing yield is the same as maximizing capacity utilization.
Question
Yield management works with fixed capacities and flexible demands.
Question
If demand cannot be segmented into price- and time-sensitive categories, then this is the best situation for yield management to work.
Question
Overbooking is when hotels and airlines know some customers will not turn up (no-shows) and they resell these reservations to compensate for the absences.
Question
Overbooking is usually best done on the basis of expected number of show-ups.
Question
Industries like car rentals use yield management techniques for dynamic capacity, pricing, and overbooking decisions because of the complexity of the problems they face.
Question
Appointments, reservations, posted schedules, and wait lines are examples of how variations in capacity are smoothened.
Question
Basic waiting line model assumptions include the first come, first served line discipline; the unlimited line length; and no customer reneging (abandoning line) or balking.
Question
Waiting line remedies come in two forms: mental and psychological.
Question
Employee training and frequent job rotation help reduce service time variability.
Question
Line balancing is a strategy to reducing wait times by taking away tasks from underworked stations and distributing them to overloaded stations.
Question
Customer involvement and frequent communication can affect customer psychological perceptions of waiting time.
Question
Internal performance measures of managing capacity include the percentage reduction in waiting times and the percentage increase in customer satisfaction.
Question
Variance in planned capacity expenditures and cost of underutilized capacity are two financial measures of managing capacity.
Question
Unexpected declines in demand can be managed by reducing product variety, hiking prices, and using customers to create demand.
Question
Facilities closures and slowdowns and using excess capacity for other productive purposes are ways of managing sudden declines in demand.
Question
Because of their complexity, capacity management techniques are difficult to integrate with supply chain management, sales, and distribution techniques.
Question
Capacity management techniques have found nontraditional applications in areas such finance, telecom, and hospitals.
Question
Capacity management is defined as

A) a tactical activity in the present moment
B) primarily focused on the intelligent utilization of capacity
C) use of short-term actions to increase capacity scalability and flexibility to meet current demand
D) all of the above
Question
Capacity planning is

A) a strategic task
B) the acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs
C) arranging for capacity needs to meet guaranteed customer service levels
D) all of the above
Question
Which of the following is not an approach to demand management when capacity cannot be easily expanded or reduced?

A) reservations
B) appointments
C) discount pricing for peak times
D) inexpensive rates for off-peak demand times
Question
All of the following can be done when the resources that provide capacity are fixed except

A) workforce scheduling
B) production scheduling
C) both choices A and B
D) none of the above
Question
Which of the following statements best describes process management?

A) It increases capacity by removing constraint points (bottlenecks) in the system.
B) It can increase capacity by redesigning work flows.
C) Techniques such as queuing theory rearrange resources to achieve more customers in the system.
D) All of the above are correct in describing process management.
Question
Which of the following represents a common way to manage capacity at Wheels 2Go car rental service?

A) changing the front desk staffing levels
B) reservations
C) having as many vehicle types as possible
D) carrying only one vehicle type
Question
Capacity management is important because it is

A) a powerful source of competitive advantage
B) used to determine bus fares
C) used to guaranteed customer demand levels
D) all of the above
Question
An example of a fixed capacity/flexible demand scenario is

A) a cellular network provider
B) an automobile repair facility
C) a fast food restaurant
D) a post office branch
Question
Yield management can be described as

A) managing capacity independent of time constraints
B) stabilizing prices so as to offer a best price to all customers
C) maximizing revenue across standardized customer segments
D) enabling fixed capacity businesses to realize optimum revenue, particularly from perishable inventory
Question
Which of the following conditions are invalid for yield management?

A) advance sales
B) differentiated customer segments
C) variable capacity
D) flexible demand
Question
Yield management can be used by all of the following industries except

A) hotels
B) automobile manufacturers
C) airlines
D) cruise lines
Question
Overbooking can be done on the basis of all the following techniques except

A) the manager's experience
B) using the newsvendor model
C) expected cost analysis
D) the average number of no-shows
Question
EZjet Airlines usually reserves 10 seats of their standard 100-seat aircraft for last-minute travelers wishing to pay more. This is an example of which practice?

A) price fencing
B) overbooking
C) LCFS
D) none of the above
Question
Based on experience, the manager at the Giraffe Hotel decides to accept a reservation for a party of 12 guests knowing that his hotel is sold out. She is accepting the reservation because

A) She can cancel the reservations of the 12 lowest-paying guests and get more revenue from the new guests.
B) She can make arrangements with the neighboring hotel to accept the 12 guests.
C) She is using overbooking techniques and has determined that she can safely accept the 12 guests.
D) She knows she will have 6 cancellations and 6 no-shows among the current reservations.
Question
Powerful scheduling software that can accommodate multiple constraints for managing fixed capacity and inflexible demand can be used to schedule

A) classrooms for college courses
B) emergency room nurses
C) fast food workers at a large restaurant chain
D) all of the above
Question
Queuing theory, the study of waiting line models, helps operations managers better understand

A) inadequate capacity and variability in demand arrival rates/service times
B) service businesses such as UPS, USPS, or FedEx
C) assembly line-type manufacturing
D) why people go to the bank or doctor's office
Question
Which of the following situations is not an example of a common queue?

A) a mailroom clerk following a computer-generated route
B) supermarket shoppers being served by checkout cashiers
C) commuters purchasing tickets at a busy railway station
D) photocopy machinery waiting to be repaired or maintained by a crew of service technicians
Question
The basic M/M/1 queuing model has all of the following properties except

A) the line discipline is first come, first served
B) limited customers
C) customers do not abandon or refuse to join the line
D) all of the above
Question
Which of the following scenario(s) violates the basic M/M/1 model requirements?

A) customers checking out at a local library
B) customers waiting to be seated in a casual-dining restaurant
C) patients entering a hospital emergency room
D) All of the above satisfy the basic M/M/1 model.
Question
During finals week, students arrive randomly at the help desk of the computer lab. There is only one technician due to budget cuts, and the time required to provide service varies from student to student. The average arrival rate is 15 students per hour, and the average service rate is 20 students per hour. Arrival rates have been found to follow the Poisson distribution, and the service times follow the exponential distribution. What is the average time spent waiting in line for each student?

A) 15 minutes
B) 20 minutes
C) 5 minutes
D) 9 minutes
Question
In the previous example, what is the average number of students in the line?

A) 2.25 students
B) 5 students
C) 15 students
D) 20 students
Question
The technician in question 20 claims he is always busy. Using the data from question 20, how often is he actually busy?

A) 25 percent of the time
B) 75 percent of the time
C) 100 percent of the time
D) 95 percent of the time
Question
The administration finally increases the budget for the computer lab after numerous student protests, and the lab hires a new technician, Speedy McQueen. Unfortunately, he realizes that he will get paid per hour and not per student, so he works at the same rate as the first technician. What is the average waiting time per student now?

A) the same as before
B) half the amount as before
C) less than half the amount as before
D) impossible to tell without additional information
Question
Reducing service time variability is another lever to push in the actual reduction of wait times. This can be accomplished by

A) employee training
B) line balancing
C) cellular manufacturing
D) all of the above
Question
Magazines, TVs, elevator music, and frequent communication are all

A) psychological ways of reducing wait times
B) physical ways of reducing wait times
C) social ways of reducing wait times
D) none of the above
Question
Which of the following is not a performance measure of managing capacity?

A) percentage increase in productivity
B) percentage increase in inventory levels
C) percentage increase in customer satisfaction
D) percentage decrease in waiting times
Question
All of the following actions can be taken if demand falls suddenly except

A) shifting capacity to growth markets
B) closing facilities
C) increasing the variety of products
D) increasing advertising
Question
If demand increases suddenly, then management can

A) reduce the variety of products and services offered
B) offer customers incentives to wait
C) rotate employees in the stressful, customer-interface positions
D) all of the above
Question
__________ is a tactical activity primarily focused on the intelligent utilization of capacity.
Question
__________ is a strategic task that involves the future development and acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs.
Question
Manipulating demand to meet available capacity when capacity cannot be easily expanded or reduced is done through __________.
Question
A technique for allocating fixed capacity to different customers differentiated by timing and price elasticity is known as __________.
Question
__________ can increase capacity by redesigning work flows and identifying and managing constraint points in a system.
Question
__________ is done because rooms and departures would go empty due to last minute customer cancellations or customers simply not turning up (no-shows).
Question
Waiting line times can be reduced in two ways: __________ and __________.
Question
Wally's Car Wash operates seven days a week. The daily worker requirements are estimated as follows:
Wally's Car Wash operates seven days a week. The daily worker requirements are estimated as follows:   Each worker is required to work five days per week, and each must have two consecutive days off. What is the minimum number of workers needed? (Name the workers A, B, C, etc., or make up any names you want.) Provide the days off that each worker receives.<div style=padding-top: 35px> Each worker is required to work five days per week, and each must have two consecutive days off. What is the minimum number of workers needed? (Name the workers A, B, C, etc., or make up any names you want.) Provide the days off that each worker receives.
Question
__________ and __________ can help reduce seasonality in demand for waiting lines.
Question
Two performance measures of managing capacity are __________ and __________.
Question
Hospitals use number of beds and inpatient utilization (inpatient days) to measure capacity. There's no time period on the former measure of capacity, and thus there is no "throughput." Why would these measures be misleading? How can hospitals better manage their capacity?
Question
What is the fundamental difference between capacity management and capacity planning? Support your answer with a brief example.
Question
Distinguish between managing capacity with demand management and managing capacity with resource management.
Question
Why is the capacity management important? Explain why it is important to businesses and to you.
Question
Identify and discuss the techniques for managing capacity.
Question
What is yield management (also called revenue management)? Explain its relationship with overbooking.
Question
What are the assumptions of the basic waiting line model? Are these valid in real life? Give examples in which the model might be the most accurate and the most inaccurate.
Question
Discuss the physical and psychological ways that waiting line times might be reduced.
Question
Identify and discuss at least five performance measures of managing capacity, including at least one in each of the three categories of measurements.
Question
What are some of the measures an operations manager can take if demand falls suddenly? What if demand increases unexpectedly?
Question
How has capacity management been evolving in recent times? Briefly discuss a few areas of nontraditional application.
Question
Customers arrive at drive-thru window at the local fast food place at an average rate of 12 per hour, following a Poisson distribution. The server at the window can service an average of 3 cars every 12 minutes with service times described by an exponential distribution. The manager asks you to help him figure out the following:

A) average utilization
B) average time a customer spends in line waiting to enter the drive-thru bay
C) average number of customers waiting in line
D) probability of having more than 4 cars in the system
Question
Customers arrive at drive-thru window at the local fast food place at an average rate of 12 per hour, following a Poisson distribution. The server at the window can service an average of 3 cars every 12 minutes with service times described by an exponential distribution. If a second lane is added where the server can process 4 cars every 15 minutes, calculate the following:

A) average utilization for one server and two servers
B) average time a customer spends in line waiting to enter the drive-thru bay for one server and two servers
C) average number of customers waiting in line for one server and two servers
D) Which system is better?
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Deck 7: Managing Capacity
1
Management of demand and management of resources constitute the two broad content areas of capacity management.
True
2
Capacity is the minimum amount of output that a system can produce in a sustained manner over a year.
False
3
Capacity management is an operational activity that primarily focuses on the intelligent utilization of capacity.
True
4
Capacity planning is a tactical task that involves the current development and acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs.
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k this deck
5
Price changes are useful ways for shifting demand to meet available capacity of a facility.
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6
Premium pricing can be used to effectively wean out low-profit customers during off-peak capacity utilization times and bring demand down.
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7
Process management can increase capacity by redesigning work flows.
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8
Capacity management is not a source of competitive advantage since any well-established firm can match supply and demand.
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9
Yield management parses capacity into separate pricing segments in an effort to maximize profits or revenues.
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10
Maximizing yield is the same as maximizing capacity utilization.
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11
Yield management works with fixed capacities and flexible demands.
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12
If demand cannot be segmented into price- and time-sensitive categories, then this is the best situation for yield management to work.
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13
Overbooking is when hotels and airlines know some customers will not turn up (no-shows) and they resell these reservations to compensate for the absences.
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14
Overbooking is usually best done on the basis of expected number of show-ups.
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15
Industries like car rentals use yield management techniques for dynamic capacity, pricing, and overbooking decisions because of the complexity of the problems they face.
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16
Appointments, reservations, posted schedules, and wait lines are examples of how variations in capacity are smoothened.
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17
Basic waiting line model assumptions include the first come, first served line discipline; the unlimited line length; and no customer reneging (abandoning line) or balking.
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18
Waiting line remedies come in two forms: mental and psychological.
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19
Employee training and frequent job rotation help reduce service time variability.
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20
Line balancing is a strategy to reducing wait times by taking away tasks from underworked stations and distributing them to overloaded stations.
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21
Customer involvement and frequent communication can affect customer psychological perceptions of waiting time.
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22
Internal performance measures of managing capacity include the percentage reduction in waiting times and the percentage increase in customer satisfaction.
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23
Variance in planned capacity expenditures and cost of underutilized capacity are two financial measures of managing capacity.
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24
Unexpected declines in demand can be managed by reducing product variety, hiking prices, and using customers to create demand.
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25
Facilities closures and slowdowns and using excess capacity for other productive purposes are ways of managing sudden declines in demand.
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26
Because of their complexity, capacity management techniques are difficult to integrate with supply chain management, sales, and distribution techniques.
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27
Capacity management techniques have found nontraditional applications in areas such finance, telecom, and hospitals.
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28
Capacity management is defined as

A) a tactical activity in the present moment
B) primarily focused on the intelligent utilization of capacity
C) use of short-term actions to increase capacity scalability and flexibility to meet current demand
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Capacity planning is

A) a strategic task
B) the acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs
C) arranging for capacity needs to meet guaranteed customer service levels
D) all of the above
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30
Which of the following is not an approach to demand management when capacity cannot be easily expanded or reduced?

A) reservations
B) appointments
C) discount pricing for peak times
D) inexpensive rates for off-peak demand times
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31
All of the following can be done when the resources that provide capacity are fixed except

A) workforce scheduling
B) production scheduling
C) both choices A and B
D) none of the above
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
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32
Which of the following statements best describes process management?

A) It increases capacity by removing constraint points (bottlenecks) in the system.
B) It can increase capacity by redesigning work flows.
C) Techniques such as queuing theory rearrange resources to achieve more customers in the system.
D) All of the above are correct in describing process management.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
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33
Which of the following represents a common way to manage capacity at Wheels 2Go car rental service?

A) changing the front desk staffing levels
B) reservations
C) having as many vehicle types as possible
D) carrying only one vehicle type
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Capacity management is important because it is

A) a powerful source of competitive advantage
B) used to determine bus fares
C) used to guaranteed customer demand levels
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
An example of a fixed capacity/flexible demand scenario is

A) a cellular network provider
B) an automobile repair facility
C) a fast food restaurant
D) a post office branch
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Yield management can be described as

A) managing capacity independent of time constraints
B) stabilizing prices so as to offer a best price to all customers
C) maximizing revenue across standardized customer segments
D) enabling fixed capacity businesses to realize optimum revenue, particularly from perishable inventory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which of the following conditions are invalid for yield management?

A) advance sales
B) differentiated customer segments
C) variable capacity
D) flexible demand
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38
Yield management can be used by all of the following industries except

A) hotels
B) automobile manufacturers
C) airlines
D) cruise lines
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39
Overbooking can be done on the basis of all the following techniques except

A) the manager's experience
B) using the newsvendor model
C) expected cost analysis
D) the average number of no-shows
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
EZjet Airlines usually reserves 10 seats of their standard 100-seat aircraft for last-minute travelers wishing to pay more. This is an example of which practice?

A) price fencing
B) overbooking
C) LCFS
D) none of the above
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Based on experience, the manager at the Giraffe Hotel decides to accept a reservation for a party of 12 guests knowing that his hotel is sold out. She is accepting the reservation because

A) She can cancel the reservations of the 12 lowest-paying guests and get more revenue from the new guests.
B) She can make arrangements with the neighboring hotel to accept the 12 guests.
C) She is using overbooking techniques and has determined that she can safely accept the 12 guests.
D) She knows she will have 6 cancellations and 6 no-shows among the current reservations.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
42
Powerful scheduling software that can accommodate multiple constraints for managing fixed capacity and inflexible demand can be used to schedule

A) classrooms for college courses
B) emergency room nurses
C) fast food workers at a large restaurant chain
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Queuing theory, the study of waiting line models, helps operations managers better understand

A) inadequate capacity and variability in demand arrival rates/service times
B) service businesses such as UPS, USPS, or FedEx
C) assembly line-type manufacturing
D) why people go to the bank or doctor's office
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Which of the following situations is not an example of a common queue?

A) a mailroom clerk following a computer-generated route
B) supermarket shoppers being served by checkout cashiers
C) commuters purchasing tickets at a busy railway station
D) photocopy machinery waiting to be repaired or maintained by a crew of service technicians
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The basic M/M/1 queuing model has all of the following properties except

A) the line discipline is first come, first served
B) limited customers
C) customers do not abandon or refuse to join the line
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Which of the following scenario(s) violates the basic M/M/1 model requirements?

A) customers checking out at a local library
B) customers waiting to be seated in a casual-dining restaurant
C) patients entering a hospital emergency room
D) All of the above satisfy the basic M/M/1 model.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
During finals week, students arrive randomly at the help desk of the computer lab. There is only one technician due to budget cuts, and the time required to provide service varies from student to student. The average arrival rate is 15 students per hour, and the average service rate is 20 students per hour. Arrival rates have been found to follow the Poisson distribution, and the service times follow the exponential distribution. What is the average time spent waiting in line for each student?

A) 15 minutes
B) 20 minutes
C) 5 minutes
D) 9 minutes
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
In the previous example, what is the average number of students in the line?

A) 2.25 students
B) 5 students
C) 15 students
D) 20 students
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The technician in question 20 claims he is always busy. Using the data from question 20, how often is he actually busy?

A) 25 percent of the time
B) 75 percent of the time
C) 100 percent of the time
D) 95 percent of the time
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
The administration finally increases the budget for the computer lab after numerous student protests, and the lab hires a new technician, Speedy McQueen. Unfortunately, he realizes that he will get paid per hour and not per student, so he works at the same rate as the first technician. What is the average waiting time per student now?

A) the same as before
B) half the amount as before
C) less than half the amount as before
D) impossible to tell without additional information
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Reducing service time variability is another lever to push in the actual reduction of wait times. This can be accomplished by

A) employee training
B) line balancing
C) cellular manufacturing
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Magazines, TVs, elevator music, and frequent communication are all

A) psychological ways of reducing wait times
B) physical ways of reducing wait times
C) social ways of reducing wait times
D) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Which of the following is not a performance measure of managing capacity?

A) percentage increase in productivity
B) percentage increase in inventory levels
C) percentage increase in customer satisfaction
D) percentage decrease in waiting times
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
All of the following actions can be taken if demand falls suddenly except

A) shifting capacity to growth markets
B) closing facilities
C) increasing the variety of products
D) increasing advertising
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
If demand increases suddenly, then management can

A) reduce the variety of products and services offered
B) offer customers incentives to wait
C) rotate employees in the stressful, customer-interface positions
D) all of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
__________ is a tactical activity primarily focused on the intelligent utilization of capacity.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
57
__________ is a strategic task that involves the future development and acquisition of capacity in order to meet future market needs.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Manipulating demand to meet available capacity when capacity cannot be easily expanded or reduced is done through __________.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
59
A technique for allocating fixed capacity to different customers differentiated by timing and price elasticity is known as __________.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
60
__________ can increase capacity by redesigning work flows and identifying and managing constraint points in a system.
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k this deck
61
__________ is done because rooms and departures would go empty due to last minute customer cancellations or customers simply not turning up (no-shows).
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Waiting line times can be reduced in two ways: __________ and __________.
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Unlock for access to all 79 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Wally's Car Wash operates seven days a week. The daily worker requirements are estimated as follows:
Wally's Car Wash operates seven days a week. The daily worker requirements are estimated as follows:   Each worker is required to work five days per week, and each must have two consecutive days off. What is the minimum number of workers needed? (Name the workers A, B, C, etc., or make up any names you want.) Provide the days off that each worker receives. Each worker is required to work five days per week, and each must have two consecutive days off. What is the minimum number of workers needed? (Name the workers A, B, C, etc., or make up any names you want.) Provide the days off that each worker receives.
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64
__________ and __________ can help reduce seasonality in demand for waiting lines.
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65
Two performance measures of managing capacity are __________ and __________.
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66
Hospitals use number of beds and inpatient utilization (inpatient days) to measure capacity. There's no time period on the former measure of capacity, and thus there is no "throughput." Why would these measures be misleading? How can hospitals better manage their capacity?
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67
What is the fundamental difference between capacity management and capacity planning? Support your answer with a brief example.
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68
Distinguish between managing capacity with demand management and managing capacity with resource management.
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69
Why is the capacity management important? Explain why it is important to businesses and to you.
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70
Identify and discuss the techniques for managing capacity.
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71
What is yield management (also called revenue management)? Explain its relationship with overbooking.
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72
What are the assumptions of the basic waiting line model? Are these valid in real life? Give examples in which the model might be the most accurate and the most inaccurate.
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73
Discuss the physical and psychological ways that waiting line times might be reduced.
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74
Identify and discuss at least five performance measures of managing capacity, including at least one in each of the three categories of measurements.
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75
What are some of the measures an operations manager can take if demand falls suddenly? What if demand increases unexpectedly?
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76
How has capacity management been evolving in recent times? Briefly discuss a few areas of nontraditional application.
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77
Customers arrive at drive-thru window at the local fast food place at an average rate of 12 per hour, following a Poisson distribution. The server at the window can service an average of 3 cars every 12 minutes with service times described by an exponential distribution. The manager asks you to help him figure out the following:

A) average utilization
B) average time a customer spends in line waiting to enter the drive-thru bay
C) average number of customers waiting in line
D) probability of having more than 4 cars in the system
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78
Customers arrive at drive-thru window at the local fast food place at an average rate of 12 per hour, following a Poisson distribution. The server at the window can service an average of 3 cars every 12 minutes with service times described by an exponential distribution. If a second lane is added where the server can process 4 cars every 15 minutes, calculate the following:

A) average utilization for one server and two servers
B) average time a customer spends in line waiting to enter the drive-thru bay for one server and two servers
C) average number of customers waiting in line for one server and two servers
D) Which system is better?
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