Ethics Theories Chart 7/14/2010 Wanda Moore University of Phoenix Material Facilitator: Wanda Moore |Ethical Theory |Comparison of Ethical Theories | | | | | | | |Utilitarianism Ethics |Deontological Ethics
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The Toyota Way and Supply Chain Management Jeffrey K. Liker Professor‚ Industrial and Operations Engineering The University of Michigan and Principal‚ Optiprise‚ Inc. Presentation for OESA Lean to Survive Program 2005 © Copyright Jeffrey Liker 2/14/2005Lean Enterprise Excellence Building Page 1 Supplier Gap: Toyota vs Big-3 Supplier Improvement‚ 1990-96 Defects (parts per million) Sales/Direct Employee Inventories/Sales U.S. OEM (Chrysler‚ Ford‚ GM) -47% +1% -6% Toyota -84% +36% -35%
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Summarize the reading in 1 sentence. Everywhere from Canada to Argentina‚ governments sponsored railroad development. Section 1: Independence in Latin America – Read pages 646651. Using the SPICE acronym (see handout)‚ complete the following chart‚ placing 1 fact into each of the SPICE boxes. S(social) P(political) I(interactive) C(cultural) E(economic) Creoles were bad in Mexico Revolutionaries Spain+Portugal Urban poor dominate invest faced high prices Slavery Colonial officials
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University of Phoenix Material Employment Laws Chart Complete the chart below using information from the weekly readings and additional research if necessary. | | |Court Case Influential to | | | | |Description and Requirement of Law |Establishment of Law |Importance of Law
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Toyota Motor Manufacturing‚ USA‚ Inc Case Analysis * Main and sub ideas of the case. The main topic of the case was the problems caused by defective or damaged seats. TMM USA’s seat problem was threefold. The first was the actual defects with the hooks and the damaged caused by cross threading by employees when installing the seats. This problem led to the second problem‚ which was the departure from the Toyota Production System (TPS) when dealing with the seat problem. Rather than fix the problem
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Toyota Production System (TPS) Toyota Production System The practical expression of Toyota’s people and customer-oriented philosophy is known as the Toyota Production System (TPS). This is not a rigid company-imposed procedure but a set of principles that have been proven in day-to-day practice over many years. Many of these ideas have been adopted and imitated all over the world. TPS has three desired outcomes: * To provide the customer with the highest quality vehicles‚ at lowest possible cost
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Part 1: Recording Observations In the chart below‚ record your observations of each test for the seven minerals. After you have completed all tests‚ name the minerals in Part 2 of this worksheet. An example of how to fill out the chart is illustrated below. |Recorded Observations for Minerals 1-7 | |Tests
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Toyota Motor Manufacturing – Assignment #6 Mgmt 660 - Professor Suresh Chand Date: September 18‚ 2010 Toyota Assignment #6 (1) As Doug Friesen‚ what would you do to address the seat problem? Where would you focus your attention and solution efforts? What options exist? What would you recommend? Why? The first thing that should be addressed is finding what the actual reason for the problem is. In looking at the defect data from Exhibit 8‚ it identifies 5 seat defects that constitute
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how the macro environment impacts upon industries 1. Introduction To answer this question‚ I will use Toyota as an example of an automotible industry within South Africa. An industry can be defined as a group of companies that satisfies a specific customer need. 2. Economic forces Since economic forces can change the health of the economy‚ they also have a direct impact on the broader industrial competitive environment. The four most important of these forces are: • the growth rate
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Meeting with friends & hanging out with them‚ shopping‚ having some foods. Time might cross 07:00 PM. | Getting back home | 07:10 PM | 07:45 PM | Meeting local buddies & having some chats with them until its 08:00 PM. | “Organization Chart” Items | Time taken per Day | Time taken per Week | Time taken per Year | Wake up | 30 minutes | 150 minutes | 7200 minutes | Getting clean & fresh | 30 minutes | 150 minutes | 7200 minutes | Having breakfast | 20 minutes | 100 minutes
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