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  2. Lead time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_time

    A lead time is the latency between the initiation and completion of a process. For example, the lead time between the placement of an order and delivery of new cars by a given manufacturer might be between 2 weeks and 6 months, depending on various particularities.

  3. Demand flow technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_Flow_Technology

    Demand flow technology (DFT) is a strategy for defining and deploying business processes in a flow, driven in response to customer demand. DFT is based on a set of applied mathematical tools that are used to connect processes in a flow and link it to daily changes in demand.

  4. Engineer to order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engineer_to_Order

    Engineer to order is a production approach characterized by: [1] Engineering activities need to be added to product lead time. Upon receipt of a customer order, the order engineering requirements and specifications are not known in detail. There is a substantial amount of design and engineering analysis required.

  5. Supply chain responsiveness matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_chain...

    A supply chain responsiveness matrix is a tool that is used to analyze inventory and lead time within an organization. The matrix is one of a number of value stream mapping tools. [1] The matrix is represented by showing lead time along the x-axis and inventory along the y-axis. The result shows where slow moving stock resides.

  6. Little's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little's_law

    In mathematical queueing theory, Little's law (also result, theorem, lemma, or formula [1] [2]) is a theorem by John Little which states that the long-term average number L of customers in a stationary system is equal to the long-term average effective arrival rate λ multiplied by the average time W that a customer spends in the system.

  7. Flow-shop scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow-shop_scheduling

    Flow Shop Ordonnancement. Flow-shop scheduling is an optimization problem in computer science and operations research.It is a variant of optimal job scheduling.In a general job-scheduling problem, we are given n jobs J 1, J 2, ..., J n of varying processing times, which need to be scheduled on m machines with varying processing power, while trying to minimize the makespan – the total length ...

  8. Production flow analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production_flow_analysis

    In operations management and industrial engineering, production flow analysis refers to methods which share the following characteristics: Classification of machines; Technological cycles information control; Generating a binary product-machines matrix (1 if a given product requires processing in a given machine, 0 otherwise)

  9. Order fulfillment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_fulfillment

    The first research towards defining order fulfilment strategies was published by Hans Wortmann, [1] and was continued by Hal Mather [2] in his discussion of the P:D ratio, whereby P is defined as the production lead time, i.e. how long it takes to manufacture a product, and D is the demand lead time. D can be viewed as: The lead time quoted by ...