preview

Fedex - Management Case Study

Decent Essays

Absolutely, Positively Operations Research: The Federal Express Story RICHARD O . MASON Edwin L. COX school of Business Southern Methodist University Dallas, Texas 75275 JAMES L . M C K E N N E Y Harvard Business School Soldiers Field Boston, Massachusetts 02163 216 west miton Drive Bolder Creek, California 95006 School of Business Administration University of Western Ontario London, Ontario N6A 3K7 Canada WALTER CARLSON DUNCAN COPELAND Federal Express Corporation has used operations research (OR) to help make its major business decisions since its overnight package delivery operations began in 1973. An early failure pointed out the need for scientific analysis. Subsequently, a successful origin-destination model followed …show more content…

When Smith was contemplating his new business in 1972, he asked Brandon, "Could you use a computer to better schedule the aircraft?" "Definitely," was Bronson's reply. Brandon soon thereafter became an advisor to FedEx and an early employee. Smith's charge to Brandon was straightforward: Where have we failed? What should we do now? The team members closeted themselves in a conference room at Little Rock's Worthen Bank to begin their soul-searching, working 18 to 20 hours a day for 15 days straight. Their approach was classic. They began by challenging the assumption that the cities the founders knew best were best for doing business. This led them to focus on what characteristics made a city a good candidate for their route structure, and they concluded that they should include some cities because they generated a large volume of outbound small packages; others because they received a lot of small packages. Moreover, the final set of cities should account for a substantial amount of the total volume within the system. Given these guidelines, they next acted on their intuitive ideas in a systematic way to find data or indicators they could use to select cities and to decide on a route system. First, they formulated the problem in terms of an origin-destination flow model. They evaluated approximately 112 cities (yielding 12,422 cells = 112 X 112 - 112) to determine which cities they should include in the system. They developed data on origins

Get Access