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Introduction to Operations Management

Introduction to Operations Management
Please answer each question clearly, with the support example from the case.

no grammar and spelling error permits.

CASE ASSIGNMENT

BUSI 2301F
Introduction to Operations Management
HANK KOLB CASE

THIS ASSIGNMENT ACCOUNT FOR 20 % OF THE FINAL GRADE AND REPLACES THE SECOND QUIZ IN THE COURSE OUTLINE.
Please make sure to answer the questions listed below and provide a hard copy of the answers in the appropriate font (Arial 12, Double spaced – 2500 words approx.)

1. What are the main issues Hank is facing?

2. What do these events indicate about quality at the company?

3. What are the steps required to repair the process?

4. How are improvements maintained in this type of process?

5. How would this event be prevented from happening again?
Marks will be awarded based on your ability to use concepts from the readings and class discussions
9-681-083
REV: FEBRUARY 5, 1993
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Dr. Frank S. Leonard prepared this case. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as
endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.
Copyright © 1981 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-545-7685,
write Harvard Business School Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, used in a spreadsheet, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the permission of Harvard Business School.
Hank Kolb, Director, Quality Assurance
Hank Kolb was whistling as he walked toward his office, still feeling a bit like a stranger since he
had been hired four weeks before as director–quality assurance. All that week he had been away
from the plant at a seminar given for quality managers of manufacturing plants by the corporate
training department. He was now looking forward to digging into the quality problems at this
industrial products plant employing 1,200 people.
Kolb poked his head into Mark Hamler’s office, his immediate subordinate as the quality control
manager, and asked him how things had gone during the past week. Hamler’s muted smile and an
“Oh, fine,” stopped Kolb in his tracks. He didn’t know Hamler very well and was unsure about
pursuing this reply any further. Kolb was still uncertain of how to start building a relationship with
him since Hamler had been passed over for the promotion to Kolb’s job—Hamler’s evaluation form
had stated “superb technical knowledge; managerial skills lacking.” Kolb decided to inquire a little
further and asked Hamler what had happened; he replied: “Oh, just another typical quality snafu.
We had a little problem on the Greasex line last week [a specialized degreasing solvent packed in a
spray can for the high technology sector]. A little high pressure was found in some cans on the
second shift, but a supervisor vented them so that we could ship them out. We met our delivery
schedule!” Since Kolb was still relatively unfamiliar with the plant and its products, he asked Hamler
to elaborate; painfully, Hamler continued:
We’ve been having some trouble with the new filling equipment and some of the cans were
pressurized beyond the upper specification limit. The production rate is still 50% of standard, about
14 cases per shift, and we caught it halfway into the shift. Mac Evans [the inspector for that line]
picked it up, tagged the cases “hold,” and went on about his duties. When he returned at the end of
the shift to write up the rejects, Wayne Simmons, first-line supervisor, was by a pallet of finished
goods finishing sealing up a carton of the rejected Greasex; the reject “hold” tags had been removed.
He told Mac that he had heard about the high pressure from another inspector at coffee break, had
come back, taken off the tags, individually turned the cans upside down and vented every one of
them in the eight rejected cartons. He told Mac that production planning was really pushing for the
stuff and they couldn’t delay by having it sent through the rework area. He told Mac that he would
get on the operator to run the equipment right next time. Mac didn’t write it up but came in about
three days ago to tell me about it. Oh, it happens every once in a while and I told him to make sure to
check with maintenance to make sure the filling machine was adjusted; and I saw Wayne in the hall
and told him that he ought to send the stuff through rework next time.
This document is authorized for use only by Ken Gao ([email protected]). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact [email protected] or
800-988-0886 for additional copies.
681-083 Hank Kolb, Director, Quality Assurance
2
Kolb was a bit dumbfounded at this and didn’t say much—he didn’t know if this was a big deal or
not. When he got to his office, he thought again what Morgenthal, general manager, had said when
he had hired Kolb. He warned Kolb about the ” lack of a quality attitude” in the plant, and said that
Kolb “should try and do something about this.” Morgenthal further emphasized the quality problems
in the plant: “We have to improve our quality; it’s costing us a lot of money; I’m sure of it, but I can’t
prove it! Hank, you have my full support in this matter; you’re in charge of these quality problems.
This downward quality-productivity-turnover spiral has to end!”
The incident had happened a week before; the goods were probably out in the customer’s hands
by now, and everyone had forgotten about it (or wanted to). There seemed to be more pressing
problems than this for Kolb to spend his time on, but this continued to nag him. He felt that the
quality department was being treated as a joke, and he also felt that this was a personal slap from
manufacturing. He didn’t want to start a war with the production people, but what could he do?
Kolb was troubled enough to cancel his appointments and spend the morning talking to a few
people. After a long and very tactful morning, he learned the following information.
1. From personnel. The operator for the filling equipment had just been transferred from shipping
two weeks ago. He had had no formal training in this job but was being trained by Wayne,
on-the-job, to run the equipment. When Mac had tested the high-pressure cans, the operator
was nowhere to be found and had only learned of the rejected material from Wayne after the
shift was over.
2. From plant maintenance. This particular piece of automated filling equipment had been
purchased two years ago for use on another product. It had been switched to the Greasex line
six months ago and maintenance had had 12 work orders during the last month for repairs or
adjustments on it. The equipment had been adapted by plant maintenance for handling the
lower viscosity of Greasex, which it had not originally been designed for. This included
designing a special filling head. There was no scheduled preventive maintenance for this
equipment and the parts for the sensitive filling head, replaced three times in the last six
months, had to be made at a nearby machine shop. Nonstandard downtime was running at
15% of actual running time.
3. From purchasing. The plastic nozzle heads for the Greasex can, designed by a vendor for this
new product on a rush order, were often found with slight burrs on the inside rim, and this
caused some trouble in fitting the top to the can. An increase in application pressure at the
filling head by maintenance adjustment had solved the burr application problem or had at
least forced the nozzle heads on, despite burrs. Purchasing agents said that they were going
to talk to the sales representative of the nozzle head supplier about this the next time he came
in.
4. From product design and packaging. The can, designed especially for Greasex, had been
contoured to allow better gripping by the user. This change, instigated by marketing research,
set Greasex apart from the appearance of its competitors and was seen as significant by the
designers. There had been no test of the effects of the contoured can on filling speed or filling
hydrodynamics from a high-pressured filling head. Kolb had a hunch that the new design
was acting as a venturi [carrier creating suction] when being filled, but the packaging designer
thought that was unlikely.
5. From manufacturing manager. He had heard about the problem; in fact, Simmons had made a
joke about it, bragging about how he beat his production quota to the other foremen and shift
supervisors. The manufacturing manager thought Simmons was one of the “best foremen we
This document is authorized for use only by Ken Gao ([email protected]). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact [email protected] or
800-988-0886 for additional copies.
Hank Kolb, Director, Quality Assurance 681-083
3
have . . . he always gets his production out.” His promotion papers were actually on the
manufacturing manager’s desk when Kolb dropped by. Simmons was being strongly
considered for promotion to shift supervisor. The manufacturing manager, under pressure
from Morgenthal for cost improvements and reduced delivery times, sympathized with Kolb
but said that the rework area would have vented with their pressure gauges what Wayne had
done by hand. “But, I’ll speak with Wayne about the incident,” he said.
6. From marketing. The introduction of Greasex had been rushed to market to beat competitors,
and a major promotional-advertising campaign was underway to increase consumer
awareness. A deluge of orders was swamping the order-taking department and putting
Greasex high on the back-order list. Production had to turn the stuff out; even being a little
off spec was tolerable because “it would be better to have it on the shelf than not there at all.
Who cares if the label is a little crooked or the stuff comes out with a little too much pressure?
We need market share now in that high-tech segment.”
What bothered Kolb most was the safety issue of the high pressure in the cans. He had no way of
knowing how much of a hazard the high pressure was or if Simmons had vented them enough to
effectively reduce the hazard. The data from the can manufacturer, which Hamler had showed him,
indicated that the high pressure found by the inspector was not in the danger area. But again, the
inspector had only used a sample testing procedure to reject the eight cases. Even if he could morally
accept that there was no product safety hazard, could Kolb make sure that this would never happen
again?
Skipping lunch, Kolb sat in his office and thought about the morning’s events. The past week’s
seminar had talked about the role of quality, productivity and quality, creating a new attitude, and
the quality challenge, but where had they told him what to do when this happened? He had left a
very good job to come here because he thought the company was serious about the importance of
quality, and he wanted a challenge. Kolb had demanded and received a salary equal to the
manufacturing, marketing, and R&D directors, and he was one of the direct reports to the general
manager. Yet he still didn’t know exactly what he should or shouldn’t do, or even what he could or
couldn’t do under these circumstances.
This document is authorized for use only by Ken Gao ([email protected]). Copying or posting is an infringement of copyright. Please contact [email protected] or
800-988-0886 for additional copies.

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