|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
The plain language guide to getting things running smoothly in the world of business.
Operations management is all about efficiency, and Operations Management For Dummies is all about efficiently teaching you what you need to know about this business hot topic. This book tracks typical operations management MBA courses, and it will help you un-muddle concepts like process mapping, bottlenecks, Lean Production, and supply chain management. Learn to step into a business, see what needs improving, and plug in the latest tools and ideas to shape things up in any industry.
This latest edition covers, you guessed it, digital transformation. Technology is completely upending operations management, and Dummies walks you through the latest, so you can stay at the front of the pack. Other new stuff inside: supply chain traceability, ethical sourcing and carbon footprint, business resiliency, and modularizing the supply chain. It’s all here!
- Optimize operations and increase revenue with strategies and ideas that make businesses run better and cheaper
- Get easy-to-understand explanations of complex topics and theories in operations management
- Learn how operations management is affected by digital transformation and sustainability concerns
- Evaluate, design, improve, and scale all sorts of processes, regardless of business size or area of operation
Businesses can't operate successfully without effective operations and supply management. That makes Operations Management For Dummies a must―for MBA students and business professionals alike.
Several Anderson families appear to share the same origins in the
north-east of Scotland. In a wide-ranging study that explores the
roots of Andersons in Banff and Aberdeenshire, their pedigrees are
traced, through branches in Perth, Fife, Edinburgh, England and
Ireland, from the early 16th century through to the present
descendants. Anderson relationships through marriage with a number
of other families are explained. The Lindsay family, for example,
with a pedigree from the 11th century, is mentioned as well as some
200 other related families.
|
|