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Flow Chart

The document shows the typical stages of consumer goods manufacturing, including raw material processing, production planning, assembly, inspection, packaging, distribution and sales. Feedback from later stages such as testing, market research and sales data can trigger adjustments to earlier stages like production planning and product design to improve quality and customer satisfaction. The stages are interconnected in a cycle as information flows back to ensure products meet consumer needs.

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Sanjeeb Kafle
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
602 views2 pages

Flow Chart

The document shows the typical stages of consumer goods manufacturing, including raw material processing, production planning, assembly, inspection, packaging, distribution and sales. Feedback from later stages such as testing, market research and sales data can trigger adjustments to earlier stages like production planning and product design to improve quality and customer satisfaction. The stages are interconnected in a cycle as information flows back to ensure products meet consumer needs.

Uploaded by

Sanjeeb Kafle
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The diagram below shows the typical stages of consumer goods manufacturing, including the process by which

information is fed back to earlier stages to enable adjustment.

Write a report for a university lecturer describing the process shown.

You should write at least 150 words.


You should spend about 20 minutes on this task.

Sample Answer :
The given flow-chart shows the consumer product manufacturing stages and adjustment processes required to make the product
ready for sale and use. As is observed, most consumer goods go through a series of stages before they are ready for sale.
Raw materials and manufactured components comprise the initial physical input in the manufacturing process. After that, these are
stored for later assembly. However, assembly first depends upon the production planning stage, where it is decided how and in what
quantities the stored materials will be processed to create sufficient quantities of finished goods. The production planning stage itself
follows the requirements of the goods' design stage that proceeds from extensive research. After assembly, the products are
inspected and tested to maintain quality . Those units that pass the inspection and testing stages are then packaged, dispatched
and offered for sale in retail outlets. The level of sales, which is the end of the manufacturing process, helps determine production
planning.

A product's design is not only the result of product research, but is also influenced by testing and market research. If the testing
stage (after assembly and inspection) reveals unacceptable problems in the finished product, then adjustments will have to be made
to the product's design. Similarly, market research, which examines the extent and nature of the demand for products, has the role
of guiding product design to suit consumer demands which may change with time. Market research, while influenced by product
sales, also serves to foster future sales by devising suitable advertising for the goods.
The reality of consumer goods manufacturing goes well beyond a simple linear production process.

(Approximately 270 words)

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