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Measuring performance in multi‐stage service operations: An application of cause selecting control charts
Author(s) -
Sulek Joanne M.,
Marucheck Ann,
Lind Mary R.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of operations management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.649
H-Index - 191
eISSN - 1873-1317
pISSN - 0272-6963
DOI - 10.1016/j.jom.2005.04.003
Subject(s) - control chart , chart , computer science , shewhart individuals control chart , cascade , service (business) , process (computing) , context (archaeology) , control (management) , process management , operations research , engineering , ewma chart , statistics , artificial intelligence , business , mathematics , paleontology , marketing , chemical engineering , biology , operating system
Abstract Many multistage service operations exhibit the cascade property, where performance at one stage is statistically correlated with performance at the preceding stage. Prior research on multistage services has analyzed each process stage independently or in an additive manner. Increased emphasis on Six Sigma initiatives in services has rekindled interest in the use of control charts to monitor and control service processes. This study examines the cause selecting control chart as a methodology to monitor and identify potential problem areas in an actual cascade service process and compares the diagnostic capability of the cause selecting chart to that of a traditional Shewhart chart. A grocery store whose parent company was implementing efficient consumer response (ECR) serves as the research context. This study models the grocery store as a two‐stage cascade process and uses operating data from the store to construct a cause selecting chart and a traditional Shewhart chart for the front‐end operation. Analysis of the two charts reveals that the cause selecting chart outperforms the traditional control chart as tool for signaling unusual variation in performance at the front‐end stage. The analysis demonstrates that service managers can receive misleading or erroneous information from traditional control charts if the service process being monitored is a cascade process.