Interview questions for MTO of Industrial Engineering(IE). ( Part 01)
Interview
questions for MTO of Industrial Engineering. ( Part 01)
Introduce yourself?
Ans:
Good morning sir/madam.
First of all thanks for giving me that opportunity to introduce
myself.
My name is xyz ( Your Name)
I'm from Barisal
I did my schooling from ( XYZ) since 2018.
After completing my schooling, I did my graduation in bachler of art from Swami
Kalyan dev college management of education choudhary nub in 2021.
My strengths are I am a quick learner & hard working person and self-motivated
person
That's all about me & thank you for that opportunity.
Tell about your educational
history?
Ans: I graduated from XYZ University three months ago with a BA
in English and a 3.9 GPA. My English degree gave me strong communication and
writing skills & which are crucial for event planning. But when I was in
school, I got a lot of event planning experience from the curriculum as well. I
was in an improv group And where I ran all the social media accounts. My
efforts increased our show attendance by 15%. I also served as recruitment
chair for my fraternity, organizing and executing our annual fundraising and
recruitment events. Although we receive about 50 applications each year, we
received 72 in my first year in the role and 90 the following year
What's is your major subject? And why
you choose it.?
Ans: Say in your words.
Which Subjects do you studied in your whole graduation Life , tell me something
?
Ans: Say in your
words.
What is IE?
Industrial engineers work to reduce waste of time, money, materials,
energy, or other products by streamlining procedures and processes. This is
achieved by applying specialist knowledge and skills to specify, predict and
evaluate outcomes from processes and systems. Its results allow the creation of
new processes and systems with business administration activities that overlap
with fields such as production and production engineering, operations research,
systems and supply chain engineering, management science and engineering,
safety engineering, ergonomic and logistics engineering and the like. More
depending on user needs.
Why do you want to come in IE?
I chose Industrial Engineering because it suits me. I like to look at
whole processes and systems, not just one piece. I like working on problems
that make me think & How can I improve this?" I also love that there
are so many different industries that industrial engineers can use.
Why we hire You (Textile) instead of
IPE?
Sir, I am a fast learner
I do my work honestly and I can do all my work under pressure. I think your
company is the only place, where I can grownup.
What is cycle time and what's line
balance & what's skill matrix & what's efficiency &
what's earn minute & available minute?
cycle time: Cycle time is the maximum time available to
produce a job at any workstation and is a firm's key competitiveness because it
affects both cost and schedule.
line balance : Line balancing in the garment industry is the
technique of leveling the output of each operation in a garment sewing
production line. The main objective of line balancing is to produce the same
expected output in each process of an assembly line. There should be no backlog
of work between two processes or absence of work between processes. Maintaining
this balance is important because the output of one process in an assembly line
is the input for another.
skill matrix : A skill matrix is a chart or a database where
the operator's past performance in various operations is recorded in a
systematic way for future reference.
Efficiency: In the garment industry, efficiency is the
ratio of minutes produced to minutes spent multiplied by 100.
Earn minute:We know that Minutes Produced or Earning
Minutes is the product of SAM and Total Parts Produced. If these earned minutes
are divided by 60, it is converted to earned hours. Here we divide by 60
because 1 hour = 60 minutes
What is Capacity?
Capacity is the total amount or maximum
level of output that can be produced in a given period of time
What is UCL and LCL?
UCL = upper control limit. LCL = Lower Control Limit. Control limits are calculated based on the amount of change in the process you are measuring
Part 2 Coming Soon