Friday, 17 April 2015

Production Schedule



The definition of a production schedule is the timetable for the use of resources and processes required by a business to produce or provide services. A typical business will change it’s production schedule in response to what customers want, to accommodate resource charges, to reduce costs and to increase the overall efficiency.
It is mainly big businesses, companies or factories that use production schedules. They include:
·     Process change-over reduction,
·     Inventory reduction, levelling,
·     Reduced scheduling effort,
·     Increased production efficiency
·     Labour load levelling,
·     Accurate delivery date quotes,
·     Real time information.
It is not just big businesses that use production scheduling, in the film industry, production scheduling is extremely important. This doesn’t just include creating schedules but also reading, interpreting and following various scheduling devices, boards and memo’s. The directors and their assistants normally create these but the production manager and coordinator are in charge if making sure the scheduling is feasible so they must be knowledgeable and updated within the practices of the film industry.
An example of a production schedule:
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