home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ALPS Software
- INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS TOOL BOX
- (SHORT DESCRIPTION)
- The I E Tool Box is a modular collection of 20 programs
- which can be used as a personal consultant for the business
- manager, who wants an efficient operation. It looks at the
- side of business too often ignored, where countless
- unnecessary dollars go down the drain. It looks at facility
- management (including overhead cost), work measurement,
- manpower planning, investment strategies, probabilities, and
- value engineering of products or services. PC KEY-DRAW has
- been customized to allow CAD presentation of the data
- developed in the toolbox. The entire toolbox, including
- manual, uses approximately 2.1 mb on IBM compatible with DOS
- 3.xx or greater with hard disk & at least 512k RAM. Because
- of the modular design, only the commonly or currently used
- tools need to be on hard disk. The rest of the toolbox can
- rest outside in floppy disk until needed. 419 files are
- archived on 3-360kb floppy disks.
- INTRODUCTION
- INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS TOOL BOX
- (LONG DESCRIPTION)
- In business today `down sizing' seems to be the in word.
- It is a term used to mean that a business is taking advantage
- of Parkinson's law, which says in effect that the available
- workload will tend to completely fill the available time.
- Or stated another way, workers will pace themselves to use
- the allotted time. What isn't stated, when the term is
- used, is that the time frame was too large to begin with.
- Either because, the workload wasn't properly understood (how
- long will this process take?) or there was an unexpected down
- turn in the demand creating the workload. In either case,
- there is no sure way for today's manager to know how much to
- down size without knowing the true value of the workload.
- Just about everyone at one time or another has had or will
- have someone at their right hand giving them specialized
- advice. We see it on TV in congressional hearings and in
- court proceedings. The technical advice is supplied to the
- participants, on both sides, by their right-hand-man. That
- is precisely the Industrial Engineer's role in the business
- world. He is a consultant on engineered values to apply to
- every day business problems. That is not to say that he has
- all the answers needed, but within his area of knowledge and
- experience, he can be depended on to give valid information
- to be used by managers to make the best decisions they can.
- He is basically a management consultant.
- The I E Tool Box was a natural progression out of the
- Facilities Management Series, and incorporates those programs
- into the toolbox. It was developed because no collection of
- the programs within it could be located, and it was felt that
- a set of these tools organized into one toolbox would be
- beneficial to an analyst performing management studies. An
- users manual has been written only for the Facilities
- Management Series. The balance of the programs are either
- well enough menu driven or are of technical enough nature to
- require a certified analyst, and as such, a user's manual was
- deemed not required. The highly technical programs, such as
- MTM, are written so as to protect the uncertified person
- from faulty judgement. In those programs a statement is
-
-
-
-
-
-
- always made to the effect that no attempt is made to teach
- the discipline. The non industrial engineer is not excluded
- from using these programs, but should be encouraged to learn
- the more technical areas as they are needed. In this manner
- the series has enough depth to become ever more valuable to
- the user as they become more expert, but can be of value
- also from the first day. It can be like a Hoehner Marine
- Band harmonica, but is like a Chromonica, allowing sharps,
- flats, and varying shadings to problem solving. If from
- evaluation of questions coming from registered users a need
- is indicated for additional user manual, it will certainly be
- written. An industrial engineer's efforts can be directed
- in numerous directions. Five of these areas are Facilities
- Management, Facilities Acquisition, Decision Analysis, Value
- Engineering, and Work Measurement. At this point the
- toolbox has programs directed towards these areas. Since
- the area is dynamic, development work is continuing to
- expand the toolbox, and each release should have some new
- tools. In places the areas tend to merge and overlap, so
- that a program can be used in more than one area. Each
- program is a module or tool within the control of the main
- menu program which allows each program to blend into an array
- that gives the appearance of a very large program. Yet each
- program can be stored in floppy disk, streamer tape, or
- bernoulli media, waiting, away from the computer for the time
- it is needed. The Main menu allows the analyst to keep only
- the tools most commonly used, ready at hand, while the
- balance are left available but not using storage space. The
- Main menu alerts the analyst when a tool called for must be
- loaded. Only a modular program approach accommodates this.
- What follows is where each tool fits into the overall
- scheme of things and how it is valuable to that scheme. No
- valid advice can be given without understanding the question,
- and anything that can have a value assigned to it can be
- managed. Each of the programs that follow allow the analyst
- to assign values to a given function or aid visualization of
- values that have been assigned by a previous program. These
- programs are analysis aids, only. 90% of true analysis
- occurs when the analyst is forced to put the facts and
- figures developed in the study into written form. A
- narrative or report, whatever it is called, presents the
- problem, the study data, the conclusion from the data, and
- recommendations of alternatives for solution of the problem.
- Most will also include a study showing the impact to the
- operations of each alternative. The toolbox does not
- provide a text editor. There are numerous good ones on the
- market.
- The Layout Planning program is used to aid in Facilities
- Management, Work Measurement, Manpower Planning and
- Facilities Acquisition. In facilities management, one
- essential consideration is efficient and optimum use of the
- facilities. Layout Planning accomplishes this through
- consideration of which operation or department should be
- neighbor to which other operation or department within the
- facility, multi-floors can be considered also. After that is
- accomplished, each operation or department is considered for
- detailed placement of furniture and equipment within the
- operation or department. Using the Furniture and Equipment
- program to develop Work Station Units (basic modules showing
- total space, specific standardized layout of furniture,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- equipment and operator space plus allowance for aisles),
- those work station units can be blocked into an operation or
- department with other work station units and modified to meet
- existing need and provide a standardized detailed layout.
- One key in work measurement is, how much time is required
- because of required walking, both within and without an
- operation or department. The distance information is
- developed in Layout Planning and in Furniture and Equipment
- Survey, and can then be developed into standard time using
- MTM. By developing the data in Layout planning, the analyst
- is developing staffing requirements to validate the furniture
- and equipment needs. These needs can either be present or
- sometime in the future. To develop future needs the Decision
- Analysis program has compounding algorithms available, and
- the Statistics program allows regression analysis and or
- random sampling and probabilities. When extending the
- analysis into the future you are looking at the operations
- requirements for possible replacement (acquisition). By
- putting layout planning at the very core of your planning you
- begin to look at facilities as functional entities before
- looking at their form (functional buildings can be attractive
- but not all attractive buildings are functional). Are you
- in business to look attractive or perform a function? As
- you are probably beginning to see the programs within the
- toolbox are interdependent and yet can stand alone, depending
- on how much depth you want to put into your study. Layout
- of facilities on a site can be accomplished also.
- The Furniture and Equipment Survey as mentioned above is
- needed if, one you are going to rearrange your layout, and
- two if you are anticipating moving into a different building.
- The furniture and equipment program develops work station
- unit data, equipment costs and square footage requirements.
- You can identify furniture and equipment by floor and
- operation or department. This information dovetails with
- the Overhead Cost program. It is also used in the Custodial
- Requirements program. Depending on the ambition and
- sophistication of the analyst, the data developed here can be
- used to evaluate furniture and equipment usage, identifying
- unused furniture and equipment, methods improvements,
- additional furniture and equipment needs. Once again the
- thrust is to optimization and efficiency.
- The Overhead Cost program allows development of the
- overhead cost of each operation or department. The costs
- aren't intended to be developed to a degree of accuracy that
- an accountant would appreciate, but rather as a measuring
- device to draw the attention of first line managers to an
- area of facility management often overlooked. It can turn
- the spot light on poor housekeeping, furniture and equipment
- management, utilities management, etc.. This program uses
- data from the Furniture and Equipment program and the
- Custodial Requirements program.
- The Custodial Requirements program uses data from the
- Furniture and Equipment program and allows development of
- custodial requirements for each function required of
- custodians. It develops requirements for the workroom by
- operation or department, and can be used to develop employee
- work assignments when used with a detailed layout drawing
- developed in I E Tool Box or some other CAD program (even
- AutoCad if you are ready to spend or have spent $3,000.00).
- A drawing can show blocked out assignments with codings to
- indicate cleaning needs and frequencies. Also the program
-
-
-
-
-
-
- develops work hour requirements including fringe to develop
- staffing requirements.
- The Graphical Representation program uses data developed
- in the Layout Planning, Furniture and Equipment Survey, and
- the Overhead Cost programs. This program develops scaled
- graphs for visualization of data developed above, from
- calibration charts to overall cost/operation charts. This
- program does not stand alone. It requires at least one of
- the four programs mentioned above to be able to graph
- anything.
- The last program in the Facilities Management Series is
- the Space Relationship program. This program takes combined
- flow and service rankings from the Layout Planning program
- and puts the affinity pairs of operations or departments in
- rank order in a table to be used in a CAD program to draw the
- Space Relationship Diagram (Block Diagram). The listing
- also gives suggested length of the side of the square for
- square footage of each operation. This allows a starting
- place at a square to be ran, by the analyst, into the shape
- of best fit. While the other programs aid in developing
- this data, only this program and the Furniture and Equipment
- Survey data are carried over into I E Tool Box or another CAD
- program. Where eventually a detailed furniture and
- equipment layout drawing can be developed. As mentioned
- earlier then data from the other programs can be overlaid on
- either the block or detailed drawings.
- I E Tool Box needed some customization to make it more
- compatible with the thrust of these programs. A library of
- flow chart symbols was created to be used in developing the
- various process charts used in work measurement. This
- library is accessed from each individual process analysis
- form header in the I E Tool Box File/Load sequence.
- The Work Measurement Series starts with the various process
- charts: Operations Process, Flow Process, Operator Process
- (Right and Left Hand), Man-Machine Process, and Simo (Memo-
- motion using Therblig symbols to chart). The Simo chart is
- rarely, if ever, used any more but was included for
- completeness. Each procedure gives a fast track to overall
- understanding of a complex procedure or operation. The
- process charts are useful in any study, from Facilities
- Management through Value Engineering, where understanding of
- a process or function is required.
- Winding up the Work Measurement series is the Element
- Analysis program. Since Methods Time Measurement (MTM) is
- of a technical nature that requires analysis by trained
- analysts, the Element Analysis program performs only the
- grunt work of filling out the various forms. Routine
- calculations are performed, but the analyst must use a Time
- Measurement Unit (TMU) chart supplied by the MTM Association.
- The forms do provide total seconds, minutes, and hours for
- each element and the total operation or method analyzed,
- after the analyst has filled in the motion descriptions,
- frequencies and TMU's. There is a summarization form also.
- Value Engineering, like MTM, is another area where
- untrained analysts could develop conclusions hazardous to
- good management decisions. However, if the menus are
- followed, a group of people could come to some functional
- activity simplifications. The menu steers selection of the
- VE team, also. The trained analyst can through the use of
- OVAL (Organization Value Analysis Logic) analyze the office
- environment for down sizing. This procedure helps to
-
-
-
-
-
-
- question activities or parts not supporting the intended
- function of the item or operation under study.
- Most every study should present alternative solutions for
- management consideration. To aid in alternative evaluation
- the Decision Analysis program is included. This program
- allows the analyst to look at the economic impact of each
- alternative through the use of discounted differential cash
- flows. It also develops salvage value for buildings and
- land, and develops depreciation schedules (in straight line
- or sum of the years methods). Amortization schedules can be
- generated, showing fixed payments for the entire term, single
- additional principle payments at specified dates, or fixed
- additional principle payments starting at a specified future
- date. This feature allows looking at various prepayment
- strategies to evaluate alternative strengths and weaknesses.
- Each of the six compound interest algorithms can be called to
- perform individual calculations.
- The next program in this version is Statistical Analysis.
- While there are numerous statistical programs on the market,
- it was felt that one should be included in the toolbox.
- This program uses the random number generator to develop a
- listing of random samples from a selected sample size. It
- allows the analyst to perform regression and correlation
- analysis. It uses universe standard deviation to avoid bias,
- and looks at normal distribution, `t' and chi square. The
- program allows repeated passes with the data until the
- analyst wants to quit. For those who can't let go of
- reference tables, normal distribution,`t', and chi square
- tables are provided as help screens and can be referenced for
- insertion data.
- In the Manpower Planning module Complements & Schedules
- allows the analyst an opportunity to develop enough personnel
- data to schedule people. This data also gives ready refer-
- ence for home address with telephone, and can be used to
- develop seniority listings based on accession dates. This
- program can also be used to build proposed schedules for
- recommended staffing levels developed in the Volume, Hours &
- Productivity program. The Volume, Hours & Productivity pro-
- gram allows development of volume and hour data, to develop
- productivity reports. It also allows use of historical data
- to develop average daily volumes and hours for projections
- into the future. With these additions, the Personal
- Consultant should be a fairly complete tool for the
- management analyst.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ALPS SOFTWARE DISTRIBUTION LICENSING AGREEMENT
- Anyone wishing to charge people a fee for giving them a copy
- of any ALPS Software program must have the written author-
- ization of the author, without which, the distributor is
- guilty of copyright violation. To receive such authoriza-
- tion, send this completed application, with a copy of your
- software library's order form to: R. D. Bachelder, 1821 Elm
- Ave., Canon City, CO 81212-4524. Include $19.00 U.S. to
- cover the cost of processing the application and sending you
- the latest versions of ALPS Software programs. For dist-
- ributors already recognized by the Association of Shareware
- Professionals, this application is not necessary.
- Name of Organization:_________________________
- Your Name:____________________________________
- Address:______________________________________
- ______________________________________
- Telephone (incl. area code)___________________
- TERMS OF DISTRIBUTION OF ALPS Software
- 1. The fee charged may not exceed $20.00, including
- postage, mailer and any other charges. If ALPS
- Software is shipped with other disks, the $20.00
- limit includes the charge for the disk plus a pro-
- rata share of the shipping and handling and other
- charges.
- 2. Your library's catalog or listing will state that
- these programs are not free, but are copyrighted
- programs that are provided to allow the user to
- evaluate them before paying, and a copy of the
- catalog or tear sheets showing initial announcement,
- update announcement, and or evaluations will be sent
- to ALPS Software.
- 3. The offering and sale of ALPS Software will be
- stopped at any time the author so requests.
- 4. Problems or complaints will be reported to the author
- for resolution.
- 5. Licensee shall not rent, lease, sell, modify,
- decompile, disassemble, or otherwise reverse engineer
- any of these files. The 3 disk archive shall be
- distributed only in its entire and complete form. If
- there are less than 128 files or the release date is
- more than 12 months old, contact ALPS Software for
- the latest or complete version.
- 6. U.S. Government Information: Use, duplication, or
- disclosure by the U. S. Government of the computer
- software and documentation in this package shall be
- subject to the restricted rights applicable to
- commercial computer software as set forth in
- subdivision (b) (3) (ii) of the Rights in Technical
- Data and Computer Software clause at 252.227-7013
- (DFARS 52.227-7013). The Contractor/manufacturer is
- ALPS Software, 1821 Elm Ave., Canon City, Colorado
- 812312-4524.
- In return for the right to charge a fee for the
- distribution of ALPS Software. I agree to comply with
- the terms of distribution.
-
- __________________ _________ __________________ ________
- Your Signature Date R. D. Bachelder Date
- _________
- Control #
-
-