The value and limitations of using process models to describe the manufacturing organization
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Production Research
- Vol. 31 (9) , 2179-2194
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00207549308956852
Abstract
Process models offer a systematic, well-denned way of representing the structure of a firm's manufacturing operations. They record the activities that are performed in order to achieve a well-defined purpose of some kind (especially a commercial one), together with the activities' inter-dependencies. In notations such as that of IDEFo these models have a hierarchical decomposition, in which activities are successively decomposed into more detailed activities, connected by a pattern of constraints of various kinds. Process models can be used to substantiate a number of claims about the satisfactoriness of a firm's operating structures: claims that its activities can be carried out with a greater degree of concurrency, for instance, or that there are redundant or duplicated activities, or spans of control that do not match readily-identified processes. This paper describes a number of observations that were made about the practice of process modelling in an engineering firm. It discusses, in particular, the limited expressive power of process modelling notations and the problems encountered when a normative approach is taken to the analysis of a model-when the analysis refers to some notion of an ideal factory (such as a cellular organization).Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Strategizing, economizing, and economic organizationStrategic Management Journal, 1991
- A methodology to model the Dynamic structure of an organizationInformation Systems, 1985
- A methodology to model the functional structure of an organizationComputers in Industry, 1985
- A methodology to model the information structure of an organizationJournal of Systems and Software, 1985
- High level planning and control: An IDEF0 analysis for airframe manufactureJournal of Manufacturing Systems, 1984
- Efficiency of Manufacturing SystemsPublished by Springer Nature ,1983
- Structured Analysis (SA): A Language for Communicating IdeasIEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, 1977