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Master Production

Schedule
Presented By:
Megha (28)
Introduction

Products into
product groups.
They
combine Which alltogether
Aggregate Production Demand into
reflect Top Management
& Capacity Plans monthly totals. Decisions.

Personnel
Requirements
across departments

Eventually, the time comes when individual “end item” products and services
must be scheduled at specific work centers.

This is accomplished by master scheduling

Which means, producing a SUPPLY PLAN (a time table including quantities) to produce specific
items or provide specific services within a given time period.
Master Schedule & the Master Production Schedule (MPS)

The master schedule (MS) is


Example : A simple MS for an MPS item (end
a presentation of the demand, product)
including the forecast and the
backlog (customer orders
received), the master production
schedule (the supply plan), the
projected on hand (POH)
inventory, and the available-to-
promise (ATP) quantity.
The master production
schedule (MPS) is the primary
output of the master scheduling
process.It is the “plan” for
providing the supply to meet Table 1
the demand.
Master Scheduling Functions

Translate aggregate plans into specific end items.


Evaluate alternative schedules.
Generate material requirements.
Generate capacity requirements.
Facilitate information processing.
Effectively utilize capacity.
Example : A case in which the distribution requirements are the gross requirements
for the MS

Here, the
MS;
enables marketing to make
legitimate delivery
commitments to field warehouses
and final customers.
enables production to evaluate
capacity requirements in a
more detailed manner.
provides to management the
opportunity to ascertain whether
the business plan and its
strategic objectives will be
achieved.

Table 2
Understanding THE ENVIRONMENT in which
master scheduling takes place.
Before describing the activities involved in creating and
managing the MS,
we need to examine the different organizational environments in
which master scheduling takes place.
THESE ENVIRONMENTS ARE DETERMINED
BY
the company’s STRATEGIC RESPONSES
to;

the INTERESTS of
CUSTOMERS
and the ACTIONS of
COMPETITORS

Thus, a COMPETETIVE
STRATEGY evolves...
The Role and Structure of Master Scheduling

 Master Scheduling is a business process designed to balance


demand and supply at the detailed, mix level. Master Scheduling is
primarily a decision-making process, performed by an individual
called the Master Scheduler. As such, it is people-centered; the
computer’s role is to support the people in their decision-making
activities.
 The output from this process is the Master Production Schedule,
which is the anticipated build schedule for specific products (or parts
of products) and customer orders. The Master Schedule is:
• time-phased,
• extends for a number of weeks into the future, and
• is typically expressed in weekly time increments or smaller.
Inputs & outputs of master scheduling
DEVELOPING A MASTER
PRODUCTION SCHEDULE

The process of developing a master production


schedule includes
(1) calculating the projected on-hand inventory
(2) determining the timing and size of the production
quantities of specific products

Step 1. Calculate Projected On-Hand Inventories. The first


step is to calculate the
projected on-hand inventory, which is an estimate of the amount
of inventory available each week after demand has been satisfied:
Example
The manufacturer of the ladder-back chair produces the chair to
stock and needs
to develop an MPS for it. Marketing has forecasted a demand of
30 chairs for the
first week of April, but actual customer orders booked are for 38
chairs. The current on-hand inventory is 55 chairs. No MPS
quantity is due in week 1. Figure 2 shows an MPS record with
these quantities listed. As actual orders for week 1 are greater
than the forecast, the scheduler uses that figure for actual orders
in calculating the projected inventory balance at the end of week
1:
In week 2, the
forecasted
quantity
exceeds actual
orders booked,
so the
projected
on-hand
inventory for
the end of
week 2 is 17 +
0 -30= -13.
The shortage
signals
the need for
more chairs in
week 2.
Step 2. Determine the Timing and Size of MPS
Quantities. The goal of determining the timing and
size of MPS quantities is to maintain a nonnegative
projected on-hand inventory balance.

The scheduler adds the MPS quantity to the projected on-


hand inventory and searches for the next period when a
shortage occurs. This shortage signals a need for a
second MPS quantity, and so on.

Figure 3 shows a master production schedule for the ladder-


back chair for the next eight weeks. The order policy
requires production lot sizes of 150 units. A shortage of 13
chairs in week 2 will occur unless the scheduler provides for
an MPS quantity for that period.
Once the MPS quantity is scheduled, the updated projected
inventory balance for week 2 is

The scheduler proceeds column by column through the MPS


record until reaching the end, filling in the MPS quantities
as needed to avoid shortages. The 137 units will satisfy
forecasted demands until week 7, when the inventory
shortage in the absence of an MPS quantity is 7 + 0 -35 =-
28. This shortage signals the need for another MPS quantity
of 150 units. The updated inventory balance is 7 + 150 - 35
= 122 chairs for week 7.
AVAILABLE-TO-PROMISE QUANTITIES

In addition to providing manufacturing with the timing


and size of production quantities ,the MPS provides
marketing with information that is useful in negotiating
delivery dates with customers. The quantity of end
items that marketing can promise to deliver on
specified dates is called available-to-promise (ATP)
inventory. It is the difference between the customer
orders already booked and the quantity that operations
is planning to produce.
Figure 4 shows an MPS record with an additional row for the
available-to promise
quantities. The ATP in week 2 is the MPS quantity minus booked
customer
orders until the next MPS quantity, or 150 - (27 + 24 + 8 + 0 + 0)
= 91 units.

In Figure 4, the ATP for the first week is 55 + 0 - 38 = 17.


This information indicates to the sales department that it
can promise as many as 17 units this week, 91 more units
sometime in weeks 2 through 6, and 150 more units in week
7 or 8. If customer order requests exceed ATP quantities in
those time periods, the MPS must be changed before the
customer orders can be booked or the customers must be
given a later delivery date—when the next MPS quantity
arrives.
SOLVED PROBLEM
The order policy is to produce end item A in lots of 50 units.
Using the data shown in Figure 6 and the FOQ lot-sizing rule,
complete the projected on-hand inventory and MPS quantity
rows. Then complete the MPS start row by offsetting the MPS
quantities for the final assembly lead time. Finally, compute
the available-to-promise inventory for item A. If in week 1, a
customer requests a new order for 30 units of item A, when is
the earliest date the entire order could be shipped?

The projected on-hand inventory for the second


week is
where requirements are the larger of the forecast or actual
customer orders booked for shipment during this period. No MPS
quantity is required.
Without an MPS quantity in the third period, there will be a
shortage of item A: 5 + 0 - 40 =- 35.
Therefore, an MPS quantity equal to the lot size of 50 must be
scheduled for completion in the third period. Then the projected
on-hand inventory for the third week will be 5 + 50 - 40 = 15.
Figure K.7 shows the projected on-hand inventories and MPS
quantities from OM Explorer that would result from completing
the MPS calculations. The MPS start row is completed by simply
shifting a copy of the MPS quantity row to the left by one column
to account for the one-week final assembly lead time. Also
shown are the available-to-promise quantities. In week 1, the
ATP is
The ATP for the MPS quantity in week 3 is

The other ATPs equal their respective MPS quantities because there
are no booked orders for those weeks. As for the new order for 30
units, the earliest it can be shipped is week 3 because the ATP for
week 1 is insufficient. If the customer accepts the delivery date of
week 3, the ATP for week 1 will stay at 5 units and the ATP for week
3 will be reduced to 5 units. This acceptance allows the firm the
flexibility
to immediately satisfy an order for 5 units or less, if one comes in.
The customer orders booked for week 3 would be increased to 35 to
reflect the new order’s shipping date.

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