Throughput contribution. Bebe Hair Salon styles hair in three operations washing, cutting/setting, and drying and

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Throughput contribution. Bebe Hair Salon styles hair in three operations — washing, cutting/setting, and drying — and charges $15 per styling. (Each styling is one "unit.")

Bebe styles hair on a walk-in basis and does not take appointments; customers who face a wait walk across the street to another salon. Bebe's owners find it has a cutting/

setting bottleneck on Saturdays due to a limited number of stylists. The bottleneck exists for a total of eight hours each Saturday. Pertinent information follows:image text in transcribed

Each hair styling has variable costs of $5. Bebe's output is constrained by the 96 units of cutting/setting capacity. Two options exist that can relieve the bottleneck at the cutting/setting operation. Consider the differential costs associated with each of the following options to determine the impact on throughput.
Option

a. Bebe can increase bottleneck output by hiring one nonstylist employee to prepare customers for the cutting/setting by washing and combing their hair. This would increase the cutting/setting capacity to 1 10 each Saturday. The cost for this additional employee is $64 per Saturday.
Option

b. Bebe could hire another stylist for each Saturday increasing the cutting/setting capacity to 108 each Saturday and costing an additional $120 per Saturday.
(Note that the drying operation has a capacity of 120.)
Should Bebe's owner go ahead with either of the above two options? Why or why not?

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Managerial Accounting An Introduction To Concepts Methods And Uses

ISBN: 9780030259630

7th Edition

Authors: Michael W. Maher, Clyde P. Stickney, Roman L. Weil, Sidney Davidson

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