Operations Management: Processes and Supply Chains, Global Edition, 12th edition

Published by Pearson (October 11, 2018) © 2019

  • Lee J. Krajewski University of Notre Dame
  • Naresh K. Malhotra Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Manoj K Malhotra Case Western Reserve University
  • Larry P. Ritzman

Title overview

For undergraduate and graduate operations management courses.

Practical, easy to read text with a managerial approach to operations management

Operations Management: Processes and Supply Chains provides students with a comprehensive framework for addressing operational process and supply chain issues and uses a systemized approach while focusing on issues of current interest. The 12th Edition provides ample opportunities for students to experience the role of a manager with challenging problems, cases, a library of videos customized to the individual chapters, simulations, experiential exercises, and tightly integrated online resources.

Available with MyLab Operations Management

MyLabTM is the teaching and learning platform that empowers you to reach every student. By combining trusted author content with digital tools and a flexible platform, MyLab personalizes the learning experience and improves results for each student. Learn more about MyLab Operations Management.

  • A Unifying Central Figure introduces each chapter that embodies our philosophy of operations management, that adheres to the “building block” approach including:
  • o Part 1 a discussion on how to design and manage processes or “journeys” at the firm level. These processes must effectively satisfy customer demands.
  • o Part 2 teaches students how firms forecast their demands and satisfy them with appropriate inventory and scheduling practices.
  • o Part 3 demonstrates how the building blocks are connected into supply chains, linking the process in one firm with those of another. All three levels of the diagram are linked with feedback loops.
  • Five new Chapter-Opening Vignettes engage and stimulate students’ interest by profiling how real companies like CVS Pharmacy, Airbus, Microsoft, Ford Motor Company, and the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, apply specific operational issues addressed in each chapter.
  • Eleven new Managerial Practices provide current examples of how companies (successfully or unsuccessfully) deal with process and supply chain issues facing them as they run their operations. Examples range from the scheduling of major league baseball umpires to the use of drones in a disaster relief supply chain.
  • Chapter 3, “Quality and Performance,” introduces a systems approach to total quality management and emphasises its importance with an integrating diagram that explains the interactions between continuous improvement, employee involvement, management commitment, and analytical process thinking.
  • Chapter 1, “Using Operations to Create Value, includes a discussion on the Internet of things (IoT), which relates to the interconnectivity of objects that can collect and exchange data without human intervention.
  • Chapter 14, “Supply Chain Integration, teaches students how a disruptive technology such as additive manufacturing (AM, also called 3-D printing) can reduce material inputs and make supply chains more flexible.
  • End-of-chapter resources enhance student learning
  • Learning Goals in Review highlight where each learning goal is addressed in the chapter and cross references them with a rich set of MyLabTM Operations Management resources including Videos, Active Models, Tutors, Explorer, and POM for Windows at the student’s disposal.
  • Active Model Exercises enable students to use provided spreadsheets to do “what-if” analysis of examples presented in the text to see what would happen if certain parameters were changed.
  • Experiential Learning groups students into teams who work both in- and out-of-class on six exercises that actively involve them in team-based discussion questions and decisions. Each exercise has been thoroughly tested in class and proven to be a valuable learning tool.

Engage students with real-world examples

· A Unifying Central Figure introduces each chapter that embodies our philosophy of operations management, that adheres to the “building block” approach including:

o Part 1,a discussion on how to design and manage processes or “journeys” at the firm level. These processes must effectively satisfy customer demands.

o Part 2 teaches students how firms forecast their demands and satisfy them with appropriate inventory and scheduling practices.

o Part 3 demonstrates how the building blocks are connected into supply chains, linking the process in one firm with those of another. All three levels of the diagram are linked with feedback loops.

· Five new Chapter-Opening Vignettes engage and stimulate students’ interest by profiling how real companies like CVS Pharmacy, Airbus, Microsoft, Ford Motor Company, and the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, apply specific operational issues addressed in each chapter.

· Eleven new Managerial Practices provide current examples of how companies (successfully or unsuccessfully) deal with process and supply chain issues facing them as they run their operations. Examples range from the scheduling of major league baseball umpires to the use of drones in a disaster relief supply chain.

Hot topic discussions, on the latest in technology and its effects on the operations of a firm

· Chapter 3, “Quality and Performance,” introduces a systems approach to total quality management and emphasizes its importance with an integrating diagram that explains the interactions between continuous improvement, employee involvement, management commitment, and analytical process thinking.

· Chapter 1, “Using Operations to Create Value, includes a discussion on the Internet of things (IoT), which relates to the interconnectivity of objects that can collect and exchange data without human intervention.

· Chapter 14, “Supply Chain Integration, teaches students how a disruptive technology such as additive manufacturing (AM, also called 3-D printing) can reduce material inputs and make supply chains more flexible.

Check out the preface for a complete list of features and what's new in this edition.

MyLab Operations Management not included.

Table of contents

  • 1. Using Operations to Create Value 
  • Supplement A: Decision Making 
  • PART I: MANAGING PROCESSES 
  • 2. Process Strategy and Analysis 
  • 3. Quality and Performance 
  • 4. Capacity Planning 
  • Supplement B: Waiting Lines 
  • 5. Constraint Management 
  • 6. Lean Systems 
  • 7. Project Management 
  • PART II: MANAGING CUSTOMER DEMAND 
  • 8. Forecasting 
  • 9. Inventory management 
  • Supplement C: Special Inventory Models 
  • 10. Operations Planning and Scheduling 
  • Supplement D: Linear Programming 
  • 11. Resource Planning 
  • PART III: MANAGING SUPPLY CHAINS 
  • 12. Supply Chain Design 
  • 13. Supply Chain Logistic Networks 
  • 14. Supply Chain Integration 
  • 15. Supply Chain Sustainability 
  •  Appendix: Normal Distribution 

Need help?Get in touch

Video
Play
Privacy and cookies
By watching, you agree Pearson can share your viewership data for marketing and analytics for one year, revocable upon changing cookie preferences. Disabling cookies may affect video functionality. More info...

Pearson eTextbook: What’s on the inside just might surprise you

They say you can’t judge a book by its cover. It’s the same with your students. Meet each one right where they are with an engaging, interactive, personalized learning experience that goes beyond the textbook to fit any schedule, any budget, and any lifestyle.