CHAPTER 1: Introduction to Operations ManagementÂ
TRUE /FALSE
1. Some of the operations-related activities of Hard Rock Café include designing meals and analyzing them forÂ
ingredient cost and labor requirements.Â
True (Global company profile, easy)Â
2. The production process at Hard Rock Café is limited to meal preparation and serving customers.Â
False (Global company profile, easy)Â
3. All organizations, including service firms such as banks and hospitals, have a production function.Â
True (What is operations management? moderate)Â
4. Operations management is the set of activities that create value in the form of goods and services by transformingÂ
inputs into outputs.Â
True (What is operations management? easy)Â
5. An example of a "hidden" production function is money transfers at banks.Â
True (What is operations management? moderate)Â
6. One reason to study operations management is to learn how people organize themselves for productive enterprise.Â
True (Why study OM, easy)Â
7. The operations manager performs the management activities of planning, organizing, staffing, leading, andÂ
controlling of the OM function.Â
True (What operations managers do, easy)Â
8. "How much inventory of this item should we have?" is within the critical decision area of managing quality.Â
False (What operations managers do, easy)Â
9. In order to have a career in operations management, one must have a degree in statistics or quantitative methods.Â
 False (What operations managers do, easy)Â
10. Henry Ford is known as the Father of Scientific Management.Â
False (The heritage of operations management, easy)Â
11. Shewhart’s contributions to operations management came during the Scientific Management Era.Â
False (The heritage of operations management, easy)Â
Â
12. Students wanting to pursue a career in operations management will find multidisciplinary knowledge beneficial.Â
True (Where are the OM jobs? easy)Â
13. Customer interaction is often high for manufacturing processes, but low for services.Â
False (Operations in the service sector, moderate)Â
14. Productivity is more difficult to improve in the service sector.Â
True (The productivity challenge, moderate)Â
15. Manufacturing now constitutes the largest economic sector in postindustrial societies.Â
False (Operations in the service sector, moderate)Â
16. In the past half-century, the number of people employed in manufacturing has more or less held steady, but eachÂ
manufacturing employee is manufacturing about 20 times as much.Â
True (Operations in the service sector, easy)Â
Operations Management – Test Bank Page 2Â
17. A knowledge society is one that has migrated from work based on knowledge to one based on manual work.Â
False (The productivity challenge, easy)Â
18. Productivity is the total value of all inputs to the transformation process divided by the total value of the outputsÂ
produced.Â
False (The productivity challenge, easy)Â
19. Measuring the impact of a capital acquisition on productivity is an example of multi-factor productivity.Â
False (The productivity challenge, moderate)Â
20. Ethical and social dilemmas arise because stakeholders of a business have conflicting perspectives.Â
True (Ethics and social responsibility, easy) {AACSB: Ethical Reasoning}Â
MULTIPLE CHOICEÂ
21. At Hard Rock Café, tasks that reflect operations or operations management includeÂ
 a. designing mealsÂ
 b. testing meals (recipes)Â
 c. analyzing meals for the cost of ingredientsÂ
 d. preparing employee schedulesÂ
 e. all of the aboveÂ
 e (Global company profile, easy)Â
Â
22. An operations task performed at Hard Rock Café isÂ
a. borrowing funds to build a new restaurantÂ
 b. advertising changes in the restaurant menuÂ
 c. calculating restaurant profit and lossÂ
 d. preparing employee schedulesÂ
 e. all of the aboveÂ
 d (Global company profile, moderate)Â
23. Operations management is applicableÂ
 a. mostly to the service sectorÂ
 b. to services exclusivelyÂ
 c. mostly to the manufacturing sectorÂ
 d. to all firms, whether manufacturing and serviceÂ
 e. to the manufacturing sector exclusivelyÂ
 d (What is operations management? moderate)Â
24. Which of the following are the primary functions of all organizations?Â
 a. operations, marketing, and human resourcesÂ
 b. marketing, human resources, and finance/accountingÂ
 c. sales, quality control, and operationsÂ
 d. marketing, operations, and finance/accountingÂ
 e. research and development, finance/accounting, and purchasingÂ
 d (Organizing to produce goods and services, moderate)Â
25. Budgeting, paying the bills, and collection of funds are activities associated with theÂ
Operations Management – Test Bank Page 3Â
a. management functionÂ
b. control functionÂ
c. finance/accounting functionÂ
d. production/operations functionÂ
e. staffing functionÂ
c (Organizing to produce goods and services, moderate)Â
26. Which of the following would not be an operations function in a fast-food restaurant?Â
a. advertising and promotionÂ
b. designing the layout of the facilityÂ
c. maintaining equipmentÂ
d. making hamburgers and friesÂ
e. purchasing ingredientsÂ
a (Organizing to produce goods and services, moderate)Â
27. The marketing function's main concern is withÂ
a. producing goods or providing servicesÂ
b. procuring materials, supplies, and equipmentÂ
c. building and maintaining a positive imageÂ
d. generating the demand for the organization's products or servicesÂ
e. securing monetary resourcesÂ
d (Organizing to produce goods and services, moderate)Â
28. Reasons to study Operations Management includeÂ
a. studying why people organize themselves for free enterpriseÂ
b. knowing how goods and services are consumedÂ
c. understanding what human resource managers doÂ
d. learning about a costly part of the enterpriseÂ
e. all of the aboveÂ
d (Why study OM? moderate)Â
29. Reasons to study Operations Management include learning aboutÂ
a. why people organize themselves for productive enterpriseÂ
b. how goods and services are producedÂ
c. what operations managers doÂ
d. a costly part of the enterpriseÂ
e. all of the aboveÂ
e (Why study OM? easy)Â
30. The five elements in the management process areÂ
a. plan, direct, update, lead, and superviseÂ
b. accounting/finance, marketing, operations, and managementÂ
c. organize, plan, control, staff, and manageÂ
d. plan, organize, staff, lead, and controlÂ
e. plan, lead, organize, manage, and controlÂ
d (What do operations managers do? easy)Â
Operations Management – Test Bank Page 4Â
31. Illiteracy and poor diets have been known to cost countries up to what percent of their productivity?Â
a. 2%Â
b. 5%Â
c. 10%Â
d. 20%Â
e. 50%Â
d (Productivity variables, moderate) {AACSB: Multiculture and Diversity}Â
32. Which of the following is not an element of the management process?Â
 a. controllingÂ
 b. leadingÂ
 c. planningÂ
 d. pricingÂ
 e. staffingÂ
 d (What do operations managers do? easy)Â
33. An operations manager is not likely to be involved inÂ
a. the design of goods and services to satisfy customers' wants and needsÂ
b. the quality of goods and services to satisfy customers' wants and needsÂ
c. the identification of customers' wants and needsÂ
d. work scheduling to meet the due dates promised to customersÂ
e. maintenance schedulesÂ
c (What do operations managers do? easy)Â
34. All of the following decisions fall within the scope of operations management except forÂ
a. financial analysisÂ
b. design of goods and processesÂ
c. location of facilitiesÂ
d. managing qualityÂ
e. All of the above fall within the scope of operations management.Â
a (What do operations managers do? easy)Â
35. The Ten Critical Decisions of Operations Management includeÂ
a. Layout strategyÂ
b. MaintenanceÂ
c. Process and capacity designÂ
d. Managing qualityÂ
e. all of the aboveÂ
e (Why study OM? easy)Â
36. Which of the following is not one of The Ten Critical Decisions of Operations Management?Â
a. Layout strategyÂ
b. MaintenanceÂ
c. Process and capacity designÂ
d. Mass customizationÂ
e. Supply chain managementÂ
Operations Management – Test Bank Page 5Â
d (Why study OM? moderate)Â
37. The Ten Critical Decisions of Operations Management includeÂ
a. Finance/accountingÂ
b. AdvertisingÂ
c. Process and capacity designÂ
d. PricingÂ
e. all of the aboveÂ
c (Why study OM? moderate)Â
38. Walter Shewhart is listed among the important people of operations management because of his contributions toÂ
a. assembly line productionÂ
b. measuring the productivity in the service sectorÂ
c. just-in-time inventory methodsÂ
d. statistical quality controlÂ
e. all of the aboveÂ
d (The heritage of operations management, moderate)Â
39. Walter Shewhart, in the _____, provided the foundations for ______ in operations management.Â
a. 1920s; statistical samplingÂ
b. United Kingdom; mass productionÂ
c. U.S. Army; logisticsÂ
d. nineteenth century; interchangeable partsÂ
e. none of the aboveÂ
a ( The heritage of operations management, moderate)Â
40. Eli Whitney, in the _____, provided the foundations for ______ in operations management.Â
a. 1920s; statistical samplingÂ
b. United Kingdom; mass productionÂ
c. U.S. Army; logisticsÂ
d. nineteenth century; interchangeable partsÂ
e. none of the aboveÂ
d (The heritage of operations management, moderate)Â