Productivity

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Chapter 3:Productivity

one of the primary responsibilities of a


manager is to achieve
productive ofan organization's
use resources.The term
productivity
is used to describe this.

Productivity is an index that measures output (goods and services)


relative to the input(labor, materials, energy, and other resources used to
produce it.

It is
usually expressed as the ratio of outputto input:

Output
Productivity
Input
-

Although productivity is importantfor all business organizations, it is


particularly important for organizations thatuse a strategy of low cost,
because the higher the productivity, the lower the costof the output.
Aproductivity ratio can be computed for a
single operation, a department, an

organization, or ancountry. In business organizations, productivity


entire
ratios are used for planning workforce requirements, scheduling equipment,
financial analysis, and other importanttasks.

Productivity Growth

productivity has importantimplications for business organizations and for


entire nations.

for nonprofitorganizations, higher productivity means lower costs;for profit-based


organizations, productivity is an
important factor in determining how competitive
a
company is.

fora nation, the rate of productivity growth is of great importance.


Productivity growth is the increase in productivity from one
period to the next
relative to the productivity in the
preceding period. Thus,

productivity productivity
productivityGrowth current previous
-

x100
previous productivity
for example, if productivity increased from 80 to 84, the growth rate would be

=0.80
Growth
productivity x 100 5%.
=

Productivity
Productivity measures are useful on a number of levels. For an

individual departmentor organization, productivity


measures can be used to
track performance over time.
This allows managers to judge performance decide where
and to improvements
are needed.

for example, has slipped in a certain area, operations staff can


if productivity
examine the factors used to compute productivity to determine what has
changed and then devise a means of improving productivity in subsequent periods.
Productivity measures also can be used to judge the performance ofan entire
industry or the productivity of a country as whole. These productivity measures
a

are
aggregate measures

Business leaders are concerned with productivity as it relates to competitiveness:


if two firms both have the same level ofoutput but one requires less input
because ofhigher productivity, that one will be able to charge a lower price
and
consequently increase its share of the market.

sector
productivity in service

Service productivity is more


problematic than
manufacturing productivity.
In
many situations, itis more difficultto measure, and thus to manage, because
it involves intellectual activities and a high degree of
variability.
Thinkabout medical diagnoses, surgery, consulting, legal services, customer service,
and computer repair work. This makes productivity improvements more difficult to
achieve.
factors affecting productivity -
Main factors of
productivity
Numerous factors affect productivity. Generally, they are

1. Methods

2. capital
3. Quality
4.
Technology
5. Management
commonly
A held misconception is that workers are the main
determinant of productivity. According to thattheory, the route to produc
tivity
gains getting employees to workharder.However, the fact is that many
involves

gains in the past have come from technological improvements.


productivity

factors affecting productivity


without careful planning, technology can actually reduce productivity, especially
if itleads to
inflexibility, high costs, or mismatched operations.
of computers
Another current
productivity
pitfall results from employees' use or

smartphones for nonwork -


related activities (playing games or checkingstock prices
or
sports scores on or
the internet smartphones, and texting friends and relatives

Beyond these is the dip


all of in productivity thatresults while employees learn to use
new equipmentor procedures thatwill lead to
eventually productivity gains after the
learning phase ends.
1. Standardizing process procedures wherever possible to
and reduce variability can
have a
significantbenefitfor both productivity and quality.

2.
Scarp rates have an adverse effecton productivity, signaling inefficientuse
of resources

3. New workers tend to have lower


productivity than seasoned workers.
Thus, growing companies may experience a
lag.
productivity
4. Safety should be addressed. Accidents can take a toll on
productivity
5. Labor turnover has a
negative effect on
productivity;replacements need time to
get up to speed
6. Design of the workspace can impact productivity for example,having tools and other
work items within easy reach can
positively impact productivity.
7. Incentive plans thatrewards
productivity increases can boost productivity
and of workers and their health greatly affectproductivity
8. The education level
training can

Improving productivity
A departmentcan take number of key steps toward
company or a a
improving
productivity:
1. Develop productivity measures for all operations. Measurementis the firststep in

managing and controlling an operation.

2. Look atthe system as a whole in


deciding which operations are most critical

3. Develop methods for achieving productivity improvements, such as


soliciting ideas from
(perhaps workers, engineers, and managers),
workers
organizing teams of
studying
how other firms have increased
productivity, and reexamining the way work is done.
4. Establish reasonable goals for improvement.

5. Make itclear that management supports and encourages


productivity improvement. consider
incentives to reward workers for contributions.

6. Measure improvements and publicize them

Productivity computation
Productivity measures can be based on a single input(partial productivity), or on

more than one input (multifactor productivity),or on all inputs (total productivity)

Below table lists some examples of productivity measures. The choice of


productivity
measuresdepends primarily on the purpose ofthe measurement. If the purpose is to track

improvements in labor productivity, then labor becomes the obvious inputmeasure.


Examples

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