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Exam (elaborations) ACCOUNTING (MGMT 400) Managing Operations Across the Supply Chain, ISBN: 9781260239461 $7.49   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

Exam (elaborations) ACCOUNTING (MGMT 400) Managing Operations Across the Supply Chain, ISBN: 9781260239461

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  • June 24, 2021
  • 5
  • 2020/2021
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
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MGMT 400


27 August 2020


Question 1


Consider the following processes that you frequently encounter:


(a) Shopping for groceries.


(b) Taking a class.


Describe each process and its inputs, activities, and outputs. What is being converted or


transformed in each process? Who are the customers, suppliers, and stakeholders for each

process?


When shopping for groceries, inputs include money and the effort that you put into the

shopping process. Activities in the shopping process include spending money, where money

exchanges hands from the buyer to the seller. Another activity that happens is the labor that is

involved (the physical activity of going to do grocery shopping). The output becomes the

groceries that are bought. When taking a class, the input is the amount of time that you spend

taking the class, while the activities include going to the class physically, listening, writing down

notes, and the teacher sharing knowledge and information with students. The output here

becomes the acquisition of knowledge and mastery of concepts by students. When doing

grocery shopping, money is transformed into goods or services, and when taking a class, students

become transformed/converted into educated and learned individuals. When doing grocery

shopping, the customers include the person doing the shopping, and the seller who is selling the

groceries since he/she must have obtained them from another person, most likely a farmer. The

, suppliers in grocery shopping include the people who sold the different grocery items to the

seller at the grocery store, and the stakeholders include the supplier of the grocery items, the

seller, and the customer who buys them. When taking a class, customers include the students,

and the suppliers are the teachers, book sellers, and the non-teaching staff such as the cleaners

because they supply the service of cleaning the classrooms. The stakeholders here include

students, teachers, non-teaching staff, the book sellers, and the school management who build the

classrooms.


Question 2 a


Describe the differences between goods and services. How do the differences make the

processes designed to provide services more difficult to manage than processes designed to

provide goods?


Goods are tangible products, while services are intangible – we cannot really touch them,

e.g. education and experiences. Goods can be stored (inventoried) since we can touch them, but

services cannot be stored. In the process of producing goods, there is less customer contact

involved until the very end of that process (when selling the goods), whereas in the process of

offering services, there is extensive customer contact involved. When producing goods, one has a

long time to come up with the finished product (long lead time), but in the provision of services,

there is short lead time because customers are not usually willing to wait a long time to be

offered a service. When it comes to goods, one can be easily assured of quality, but when it

comes to services, it is much harder to assess quality, and assessing the quality of services (for

example through reviews and evaluations) is quite subjective and inaccurate when compared to

the determination of the quality of goods. The process of making goods transforms the materials

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