Jobs are a basic concept in the setup of ERP systems for many businesses. We often think of a job as a batch of production in a small “job shop” kind of business but job is a much bigger concept. It might be a batch of production for a particular customer order. It also can be a small batch of production to put a handful of product on the shelf for sale. It can be a million basketballs made over months for next Christmas sales. A job can be a project to develop software or the construction of a hotel building.
Job is simply a word we use to collect physical production and the related data. Some might call it a work order or a production order and surely there are other words.
We issue component materials from inventory and charge labor time to a job. The money accumulated under the job number is work in process inventory. When the job is complete, the accumulated costs move to finished goods inventory or directly to cost of sales when the job supports a customer order.
We use jobs for scheduling people and equipment resources needed for production of the job. Usually a resource can only work on one job at a time so other jobs that need the same resource must be scheduled at some other time. The total hours scheduled for a resource is called its load. The same resource has a capacity or the number of hours it is available for scheduling work. The ratio of load to capacity is directly related to jobs and is an important KPI for any business.
Most businesses will estimate the time and component materials required for a job. Time is based on the engineering standards for work and material is based on a standard or average cost for the material as we charge actual time and materials against the job, we can now compare actual costs to budgeted costs for a particular job and for the total of all jobs in a time period. This analysis is an important part of financial controls for the business. The analysis also can lead to improved estimates. In a perfect world, the engineer estimated a task should take 2.4 hours.
After observing real-world data over many jobs, we might see that people consistently can finish in 2.1 hours so we have an opportunity to reduce future job estimates or to pocket more future profit at our choice.
What can you gain through better use and analysis of jobs? Is it time to rethink jobs in your organization?