首页
登录
职称英语
• You will hear the opening of the Factories of the Year awards ceremony.• As y
• You will hear the opening of the Factories of the Year awards ceremony.• As y
游客
2025-06-03
14
管理
问题
• You will hear the opening of the Factories of the Year awards ceremony.
• As you listen, for questions 1-12, complete the notes, using up to three words or a number.
• After you have listened once, replay the recording.
Notes on selection procedure
Panel of judges:
• Head of panel, Jacqueline Allen, teaches (1)______ at Barrington Business School
Selection process: first stage
• a questionnaire that was (2)______ long
Measurable performance criteria included:
• length of (3)______ which affect productivity
• success in achieving reliable (4)______ times
Less tangible performance criteria included:
• importance of (5)______ .
• how well companies deal with (6)______ .
Selection process: second stage
• judges compiled a (7)______ of factories to visit
Standard characteristics of winning factories included:
• effective procedures in the area of (8)______ .
• determination to be the best
• innovations that help to achieve the factory’s (9) ______ .
New characteristics of winning factories:
• excellence at (10)______ management
• provision of (11)______ to assist personnel and visitors in finding their way
• tracking flow of production, e.g. by using (12)______ . [br]
Man: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Factories of the Year award. My name is Jonathan Hargreaves, and I’m Chief Executive of the Institute of Production Research, which organised these awards, in association with Barrington Business School. I’m delighted to introduce to you the school’s professor of manufacturing science, Jacqueline Allen, who again chaired the panel of judges. Jacqueline.
Woman: Thank you, Jonathan, and good morning, everyone. This year’s search for the Factories of the Year has produced a bumper crop of outstanding winners, which is very welcome proof that the old economy isn’t dead, but is emerging revitalised from its recent problems.
As ever, we initiated our search for the best by sending each participating factory a questionnaire. This consisted of fourteen pages and probably more questions than the recipients would have liked. From their answers, each factory was assessed on a basket of performance criteria. Some of these were immediately measurable, like handover times, which of course can have a big impact on productivity and which are showing a healthy tendency towards being shortened. Another was delivery reliability, a high score in which is essential for any customer-led organisation.
Other criteria which we considered were less tangible, but no less important for that. We took staff morale very seriously, because if it’s poor it can have measurable results such as high staff turnover and a high accident rate. And if a business can’t easily handle change, it may well create more problems than it solves, and its future is unlikely to be secure.
The next step was for the panel of judges to assess the results and devise a shortlist. We then visited these factories. I must say, I found it fascinating to see so many factories in action. As a result of these visits, we came up with the three winners in each category.
The factories that emerged from this process shared some familiar characteristics. Impressive people-management practices, for a start. A determination among the factory’s management team not to be second best, for another. And acting on the realisation that clever initiatives don’t count if they don’t further a factory’s mission. No successful factory can, for a moment, forget its customers, whether they’re internal to the company or external.
As ever, new trends emerged: an outstanding level of competence in supply-chain management, as well as in manufacturing, is increasingly important. The links between a factory, its suppliers and its customers can make or break an operation.
This year’s winners also demonstrate the importance of optimising the movement of goods and people around the factory. Confused, muddled-looking factories underperform, while successful ones use signs to help staff and visitors find the best route to their destination. And allowing goods or materials to get lost in some dusty corner of the warehouse is unacceptable: the problem of tracking components as they move through production has led to a number of developments, of which electronic tagging is one of the most exciting.
Now I’d like to turn to the individual categories...
选项
答案
CHANGE
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/4101778.html
相关试题推荐
Globalization:Disadvantagestoglobalization(全球化危害)Openingsentence:Globali
Globalization:Reasonsforglobalization(全球化原因)Openingsentence:Thetendencyt
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•YouwillheartheopeningoftheFactoriesoftheYearawardsceremony.•Asy
•Youwillhearanopeningkeynoteatthe2ndIT0utsourcingConference&Expo.•
•Youwillhearanopeningkeynoteatthe2ndIT0utsourcingConference&Expo.•
随机试题
Hisstrangebehaviorhadgreatly______meandmyfriendsaswellthatevening.A
中国作为一个发展中国家,其基本国情是人口众多、资源困乏、物质生活水平较低,尽管经过改革开放以来30多年的经济发展,但从人均收入和社会保障来看,与西方发达
按工业建筑用途划分,钢铁厂的炼钢车间属于()。A.主要生产厂房 B.辅助生产
狭义的银行信贷是银行借出资金或提供信用支持的经济活动,主要包括( )A.担保
A.牙痛齿摇 B.骨蒸盗汗 C.烦渴欲饮 D.腰膝酸软 E.食少便溏属于
对于很多学生来说,家长会历来被认为是“优生的天堂,差生的地狱”,而对于三年级二班
甲将私家车借给无驾照的乙使用。乙夜间驾车与其叔丙出行,途中遇刘某过马路,不慎将其
2017年,农户张三家的劳动力既有从事第一产业劳动的也有从事非农业产业劳动的,第
甲公司是一家通讯产品制造业企业,主营业务是移动通讯产品的生产和销售,为了扩大市场
产后72小时内血容量增加A.15%~25% B.1%~5% C.5%~10%
最新回复
(
0
)