The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to production:
Production – act of creating 'use' value or 'utility' that can satisfy a want or need.[1] The act may or may not include factors of production other than labor. Any effort directed toward the realization of a desired product or service is a "productive" effort and the performance of such act is production.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to production:
Types
- Industry – production of an economic good or service within an economy.[2] Industry is divided into four sectors, or types of production; they are:
Primary sector
- Primary sector – this involves the extraction of resources directly from the Earth, this includes agricultural and resource extraction industries. In these industries, the product (that is, the focus of production) is a natural resource.
- Agriculture (outline) – cultivation of animals, plants, fungi, and other life forms for food, fiber, and other products used to sustain life.[3]
- Animal husbandry – agricultural practice of breeding and raising livestock.
- Farming – cultivating land for the purpose of agricultural production.
- Aquaculture – the farming of fish, crustaceans, molluscs, aquatic plants, algae, and other aquatic organisms.
- Forestry (outline) – creating, managing, using, and conserving forests and associated resources in a sustainable manner to meet desired goals, needs, and values for human benefit.[4]
- Resource extraction –
- Fishing – activity of catching or harvesting fish and other aquatic animals such as molluscs, cephalopods, crustaceans, and echinoderms.
- Logging – harvesting timber, including cutting, skidding, on-site processing, and loading trees or logs onto trucks or skeleton cars.
- Mining (outline) – extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, from an ore body, vein or (coal) seam.
- Extraction of petroleum – process by which usable petroleum (oil) is extracted and removed from the earth.
- Extraction of natural gas – Natural gas is commercially extracted from oil fields and natural gas fields.
- Water industry – provides drinking water to residential, commercial, and industrial sectors of the economy.
- Agriculture (outline) – cultivation of animals, plants, fungi, and other life forms for food, fiber, and other products used to sustain life.[3]
Secondary sector
- Secondary sector – involves the processing of raw materials from primary industries, and includes the industries that produce a finished, tangible product.
- Construction – process that consists of the building or assembling of infrastructure, including buildings, roads, dams, etc.
- Manufacturing – process which involves tools and labor to produce goods for use or sale. Ranges from handicraft to high tech industrial production.
Tertiary sector
- Tertiary sector – This group is involved in the provision of services. They include teachers, managers and other service providers.
Quaternary sector
- Quaternary sector – the part of the economy that produces knowledge-based services.[5][6]
- Information industry –
- Information generation and sharing –
- Information technology –
- Consulting services –
- Education –
- Research and development –
- Financial planning services –
- Information industry –
Goals
Productivity
History
Theories of production
Economics
Manufacturing
- Manufacturing
- Factory
- English system of manufacturing
- American system of manufacturing
- Scale of production
- Just In Time manufacturing
- Toyota Production System
- Lean production
- Computer-aided manufacturing (CAM)
- Mass customization
Product engineering
Product design
- Rapid prototyping
- Computer-aided design (CAD)
- New product development
- Research and development
- Toolkits for user innovation
Production technology
- Industrial robot
- Computer-aided manufacturing
- Computer Integrated Manufacturing
- Production equipment control
- Computer numerically controlled
- Distributed Control System
- Fieldbus control system
- PLCs / PLD
- Advanced Planning & Scheduling
- Scheduling (production processes)
- SCADA supervisory control and data acquisition
- computerized maintenance management system (CMMS)
- Packaging and labeling
Machinery
Machine set-up
- Changeover
- Single-Minute Exchange of Die (SMED)
- Sequence-dependent setup (mathematical)
Lot size and run length
Service provision
Logistics
Process improvement
- Systems analysis
- Quality
- Certification Processes and Awards
See also
- Assembly line
- Computer-aided manufacturing
- Division of labour
- Economics
- Fordism
- Mass production
- Means of production
- Mode of production
- Modernity
- Outline of industrial organization
- Outline of management
- Outline of manufacturing
- Production function
- Production possibility frontier
- Production theory basics
- Productive and unproductive labour
- Productive forces
- Productivity improving technologies (historical)
- Productivity model
- Second Industrial Revolution
References
- ↑ Kotler, P., Armstrong, G., Brown, L., and Adam, S. (2006) Marketing, 7th Ed. Pearson Education Australia/Prentice Hall.
- ↑ "Industry Definition & Meaning".
- ↑ International Labour Office (1999). Safety and health in agriculture. International Labour Organization. pp. 77–. ISBN 978-92-2-111517-5. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
- ↑ "Forestry." SAF Dictionary of Forestry. The Society of American Foresters, 1998. Helms, John A. <"SAFnet Dictionary | Definition for [forestry]". Archived from the original on 2013-10-19. Retrieved 2014-03-15.>
- ↑ Tor Selstad (1990). "The rise of the quaternary sector. The regional dimension of knowledge-based services in Norway, 1970-1985". informaworld.
... knowledge-based services ...
- ↑ Peter Busch (1967). "Tacit Knowledge in Organizational Learning". Tacit Knowledge in Organizational Learning. ISBN 9781599045030. Retrieved 2010-06-17.
see page .. The quaternary sector of industry is the sector of industry that involves the intellectual services. That is research, development, and information.
External links
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- Productivity
- Productivity and Costs – Bureau of Labor Statistics United States Department of Labor: contains international comparisons of productivity rates, historical and present
- Productivity Statistics - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- Greenspan Speech
- OECD estimates of labour productivity levels
- Productivity Enhancement Through Business Automation
- Productivity Science - source for personal and business productivity information
- Productivity Assessment Framework from Zinnov LLC