Operations Management By William J Stevenson 13th Edition Ppt Best <RELIABLE>
Not all PowerPoints are created equal. When reviewing a download, check for these quality indicators:
The common mistake is reading the book or the slides. The synergy comes from using them together.
1. McGraw-Hill’s Connect (For Instructors) If you are faculty, log into your McGraw-Hill Connect account. Navigate to "Library" > "Instructor Resources." Here you will find the official PowerPoints. Pro tip: Download the "Art PPTs" (which only have diagrams) and the "Lecture PPTs" separately. Merge them for the best result. Tools & techniques summary (flowcharts, process maps, EOQ,
2. Academic Sharing Hubs (Proceed with Caution) Sites like SlideShare or Academia.edu sometimes host these files. Search for: "Stevenson Operations Management 13e Chapter 1 PPT." Watch out for: Outdated 11th or 12th edition slides. The chapter order shifted slightly between editions.
3. University Course Websites (The Goldmine)
Many professors leave their course resources public. Search Google with this specific string:
filetype:ppt "Stevenson" "13th edition" "Operations Management" Not all PowerPoints are created equal
Operations management is a visual discipline. The best PPTs do not use low-resolution screenshots. Instead, they use editable vector diagrams for Gantt charts, assembly line balancing, and Pareto charts.
Ch 8 – Quality Management
Ch 9 – Statistical Process Control (SPC)
Use the PPTs as a "thematic road map." Before your professor covers Chapter 12 (Inventory Management), review the first five slides of that chapter. Look for: Ch 9 – Statistical Process Control (SPC) Use