[Steps Shown] Janson's Department store in Stark, Ohio, maintains a success catalog sales department in which a clerk takes orders by telephone. If the clerk
Question: Janson's Department store in Stark, Ohio, maintains a success catalog sales department in which a clerk takes orders by telephone. If the clerk is occupied on one line, incoming phone calls to the catalog department are answered automatically by a recording machine and asked to wait. As soon as the clerk is free, the party who has waited the longest is transferred and serviced first. Calls come in at a rate of about 12 per hour. The clerk can take an order in an average of 4 minutes. Calls tend to follow a Poisson distribution, and service times tend to be negative exponential.
The cost of the clerk is $10 per hour, but because of lost goodwill and sales, Janson's loses about $25 per hour of customer time spent waiting for the clerk to take an order.
- What is the average time that catalog customers must wait before their calls are transferred to the order clerk?
- What is the average number of customers waiting to place an order?
- Pamela Janson is considering adding a second clerk to take calls. The store's cost would be the same $10 per hour. Should she hire another clerk? Explain your decision.
Deliverable: Word Document 