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Donald Warsing

DW
A headshot of associate professor Don Warsing standing in front of a light gray background.

Business Management

MBA Faculty Director

Associate Professor of Operations and Supply Chain Management

Production and Inventory Management

Nelson Hall 2314

919.515.6954 Website

Bio

Don Warsing taught at the Smeal College of Business at Pennsylvania State University before joining NC State. He also worked at IBM Corporation in industrial engineering and manufacturing management roles. Warsing researches tools and policies for managing inventory, logistics and business operations. He studies how management practices improve performance outcomes.
Journals such as Production and Operations Management and Journal of Operations Management have published his research. Other journals include Decision Sciences and European Journal of Operational Research. He also co-authored a graduate-level textbook titled Supply Chain Engineering: Models and Applications (CRC Press, 2012).

Education

Ph.D. Operations Management UNC- Chapel Hill 2000

MS Management NC State University 1995

BS Industrial Engineering Ohio State University 1989

Area(s) of Expertise

Warsing's research interests focus on production and inventory management, advanced/additive manufacturing and logistics/distribution.

Publications

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Grants

Date: 07/01/20 - 8/15/21
Amount: $594,758.00
Funding Agencies: National Institute of Standards & Technology

This project will help optimize COVID19 test kit distribution and allocation planning, to produce optimal outcomes for rapid testing of the population. We will conduct supply base research as input into a 50-state distribution model to inform decision-makers in how to connect suppliers of materials to testing centers, and develop a second model for testing of patients who may have contracted the virus. This model would be used to inform test manufacturers, distributors, public health officials, hospitals and commercial laboratories with testing capabilities, as well as state and federal government decision-makers.

Date: 07/01/17 - 6/30/18
Amount: $36,815.00
Funding Agencies: Center for Additive Manufacturing and Logistics - (CAMAL)

Additive manufacturing (AM) offers a potentially game changing approach for manufacturing products. Together, industry and academia are working towards identifying the opportunities and tackling the associated challenges of employing AM technology for final-use part production. Notable AM operational challenges include: (i) integrating the technology into the industry; (ii) optimizing the productivity within the build chamber; and (iii) utilizing resources more effectively (e.g. existing manufacturing capacity, additive manufacturing capacity, labor). The research proposed aims to contribute clarity towards the third operational challenge listed, utilizing the collection of resources most effectively within a production environment consisting of both AM and traditional manufacturing (TM) technologies. The primary aim of the research focuses on scheduling and dispatch policies for an AM-TM resourced facility through cost modelling analysis. A secondary aim of research investigates the associated inventory policies for all types of the associated system entity flow (i.e. raw materials, work-in-progress, and finished goods).

Date: 07/01/11 - 6/30/15
Amount: $255,474.00
Funding Agencies: NCSU Furniture Manufacturing & Management Center

Globalization in the manufacture of furniture has resulted in severe erosion in the number and scale of domestic furniture producers. Casegoods manufacturers have been the most severely impacted, although import competition in upholstered goods continues to accelerate. Possible explanations for the development of this situation abound. These include the high cost of labor and regulation in the U.S., government subsidies of foreign producers, failure to invest in manufacturing and information technology, poor asset utilization (single shift operation), failure to advertise and ?connect? with consumers, stagnant product innovation, and a retailing system that emphasizes price and destroys margins, as well as many others. The rapid movement of furniture production to off-shore sources has significantly increased the need for efficient, reliable supply chains. In addition, because of the relatively longer supply leadtimes and the resulting increase in uncertainty, inventory control policies have become more critical for balancing customer service levels and inventory costs. These issues face a number of manufacturing industries. In this proposal we address three aspects relating to supply chain sourcing and inventory analysis: (1) Mitigation of supply uncertainty; (2) Modeling unsatisfied demand and assessing realistic lost sales penalty costs; and (3) Analysis of robust supply strategies in the face of uncertainty.

Date: 08/15/11 - 12/31/11
Amount: $8,000.00
Funding Agencies: Xerox Corporation

NCSU will review the academic literature on the topic of staffing for service job shops, especially as it relates to staffing decisions that provide effective support for job scheduling procedures. Specifically, NCSU will review deterministic, constrained optimization techniques; stochastic modeling techniques; and empirically-driven, simulation-based approaches. NCSU will use the knowledge gained from the literature search---supplemented with a generalized understanding of service job shop processes of interest provided by Xerox---to recommend models found in the literature for building staffing plans that connect to Xerox processes and effectively complement the job scheduling process. NCSU will recommend an analytical model or computational model, as appropriate, in each of the above three categories (deterministic optimization, stochastic modeling, simulation modeling). The findings will be documented in a research report that is suitable for public dissemination (i.e., containing no proprietary information from Xerox). This research report will be the only University Project Deliverable to be provided to Xerox as a result of this activity.


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