An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops
Job shops have long faced pressures for improvements in a challenging and volatile environment. Today's trends of global competition and shortening of product life cycles suggest that both the challenges and the intensity of market volatility will only increase. Consequently, the study of tacti...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-37042016-02-12T01:39:49Z An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops Yang, Kum Khiong Webster, S. Ruben, R A Job shops have long faced pressures for improvements in a challenging and volatile environment. Today's trends of global competition and shortening of product life cycles suggest that both the challenges and the intensity of market volatility will only increase. Consequently, the study of tactics for maximizing the flexibility and responsiveness of a job shop is important. Indeed, there is a significant body of literature that has produced guidelines on when and how to deploy tactics such as alternate routings for jobs and transfers on cross-trained workers between machines. In this paper we consider a different tactic by adjusting the length of workdays. Hours in excess of a 40-hour week are exchanged for compensatory time off at time and a half, and the total amount of accrued compensatory time is limited to no more than 160 hours in accordance with pending legislation. We propose several simple flexible workday policies that are based on an input/output control approach and investigate their performance in a simulated job shop. We find significant gains in performance over a fixed schedule of eight hours per day. Our results also provide insights into the selection of policy parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] 2002-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2705 info:doi/10.1111/j.1540-5915.2002.tb01643.x Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Job Shop Scheduling Shop Floor Control Simulation Workforce Scheduling Human Resources Management |
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Job Shop Scheduling Shop Floor Control Simulation Workforce Scheduling Human Resources Management Yang, Kum Khiong Webster, S. Ruben, R A An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
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Job shops have long faced pressures for improvements in a challenging and volatile environment. Today's trends of global competition and shortening of product life cycles suggest that both the challenges and the intensity of market volatility will only increase. Consequently, the study of tactics for maximizing the flexibility and responsiveness of a job shop is important. Indeed, there is a significant body of literature that has produced guidelines on when and how to deploy tactics such as alternate routings for jobs and transfers on cross-trained workers between machines. In this paper we consider a different tactic by adjusting the length of workdays. Hours in excess of a 40-hour week are exchanged for compensatory time off at time and a half, and the total amount of accrued compensatory time is limited to no more than 160 hours in accordance with pending legislation. We propose several simple flexible workday policies that are based on an input/output control approach and investigate their performance in a simulated job shop. We find significant gains in performance over a fixed schedule of eight hours per day. Our results also provide insights into the selection of policy parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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text |
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Yang, Kum Khiong Webster, S. Ruben, R A |
author_facet |
Yang, Kum Khiong Webster, S. Ruben, R A |
author_sort |
Yang, Kum Khiong |
title |
An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
title_short |
An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
title_full |
An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
title_fullStr |
An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
title_full_unstemmed |
An Evaluation of Flexible Workday Policies in Job Shops |
title_sort |
evaluation of flexible workday policies in job shops |
publisher |
Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
publishDate |
2002 |
url |
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2705 |
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1770570529791541248 |