Examples of facility in the following topics:
-
- In this unit, we're going to focus on facility design and layout.
- Facility managers should consider several factors when designing the layout of a facility to achieve maximum effectiveness.
- Make sure that same is true of your facilities layout.
- Office facility layout is harder to quantify than factory facilities layout, but the goal should be to minimize communication costs and maximize productivity.
- Your industry can also influence the facilities layout design.
-
- The Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, which was signed into law by Johnson a month after he became president, authorized a dramatic increase in college aid within a five-year period and provided better college libraries, 10-20 new graduate centers, several new technical institutes, classrooms for several hundred thousand students, and 25-30 new community colleges each year.
- Distinguish the key features - as well as the effects - of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, the Higher Education Facilities Act, and the Higher Education Act.
-
- Many of these facilities end up as private rather than government organizations.
- Lack of data processing facilities makes the tasks of planning, implementing, and controlling marketing strategy more difficult.
-
- Schistosomiasis is common in countries that lack the facilities to maintain proper water supplies and sanitation facilities.
- These supplies and facilities are often exposed to contaminated water that contains infected snails.
-
- A set of computerized procedures handle the receipt of stock and returns into a warehouse facility, model and manage the logical representation of the physical storage facilities (e.g., racking), manage the stock within the facility, and enable a seamless link to order processing and logistics management in order to pick, pack and ship product out of the facility.
-
- Strategic operations decisions include facility location decisions, the type of technologies that the organization will use, determining how labor and equipment are organized, and how much long-term capacity the organization will provide to meet customer demand.
- For example, the leaders of a new hospital must decide where to locate the facility to be accessible to a large number of potential patients.
-
- The Fed responded to the financial crisis with conventional open market operations and unconventional credit facilities and bailouts.
- To deal with the shrinking credit markets, the Fed created a selection of new credit facilities.
- The Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) allows the banks that normally handle open market operations on behalf of the Fed to apply for overnight loans.
- The Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility uses the primary dealers to give companies access to loans based on asset-backed securities, such as those related to credit card or small business debt.
- These new credit facilities were created based on the hope that increasing liquidity in the market would induce firms and consumers to borrow and spend.
-
- In the 1990s, MCI, a major US telecommunications company, decided to relocate its engineering services division from MCI's headquarters in Washington DC to Colorado Springs, Colorado to reduce labor and facility costs.
- There are many factors that can determine where an organization will locate its facilities.
- For any given situation, some factors become more important than others in how facility location affects an organization's efficiency and effectiveness.
- In the 1990s, MCI, a major US telecommunications company, decided to relocate its engineering services division from MCI's headquarters in Washington DC to Colorado Springs, Colorado to reduce labor and facility costs.
-
- Under this doctrine, services, facilities and public accommodations were allowed to be separated by race on the condition that the quality of each group's public facilities was to remain equal.
- Although the Constitutional doctrine required equality, the facilities and social services offered to African-Americans were almost always of lower quality than those offered to white Americans.
-
- One example of a frontline manager is in a manufacturing facility.
- Middle management may be located in the headquarters office, receiving reports from various frontline managers at different facilities across the globe.
- These frontline managers will be directing operations at the facility, tracking employee behavior and interaction, assessing efficiency, and using technical skills to mentor workers and improve processes.