Passage Analysis
Supervisor's memo: At the present rate of manufacture we will not have the 1,200 circuit boards assembled in time to ship them to the customer.
At the current manufacturing rate, the company will not be able to assemble 1200 circuit boards within the timeline. In essence, the rate of manufacturing needs to be increased to avoid the delay to the customer.
We currently have 10 workers, working 8 hours a day, assembling the boards, and to date they've assembled 400.
So we have 10 workers working eight hours a day, so overall we have 80 working hours a day, and so far 400 boards have been assembled. We don't know how many days have been taken to assemble these 400 boards.
In order to finish the customer's order in time, I'll need to have each of the workers work an additional 2 hours for each of the 10 work days between now and the deadline.
The supervisor says that to finish the customer's order in time, which means that to produce the remaining 800 boards in time, each worker will need to work 10 hours a day, and there are 10 days remaining before the deadline. So we have 10 workers and 10 days remaining, and each of the workers works for 10 hours a day. We will be able to produce 800 boards. So I can see that we need 10 × 10 × 10, i.e., 1000 working hours, to produce the remaining 800 boards.
Question Analysis
One can determine the hourly rate at which each worker assembled circuit boards up to the date of the supervisor's memo
This is talking about the hourly rate of assembling the boards up to the date of the memo. So this is not talking about the rate of assembling after the memo. We are given that before the memo, 400 boards have been assembled, and there are 10 workers working eight hours a day, but we don't know how many days have been taken to assemble these 400 boards.
We can calculate the hourly rate of assembling by dividing the number of boards assembled by the total number of hours taken to assemble those boards. The total number of hours will be depending on the number of days, which we don't know yet.
by dividing ____1____ circuit boards by the product of ____2____ worker-hours and the number of days since the workers began assembling the circuit boards.
In the first blank here, we'll have 400 because that is the number of circuit boards that have been assembled up to the date of the memo. This number will be divided by the total number of hours taken to produce the 400 boards.
The total number of hours will be a product of the number of workers, the number of hours per day each worker works, and the total number of days.
In the second blank here, you just need worker-hours, and this second blank will be multiplied by the number of days to get the denominator or the total number of hours. The second blank will just be a product of the number of workers and the number of hours each worker works per day. The second blank will be 10 × 8, that is 80.
The question is quite straightforward, but a lot of people may falter in understanding and paying attention to the fact that the question is asking about the calculations up to the date of the memo rather than after the date of the memo.
The second mistake that people will make will be in terms of understanding the second blank. They would expect the second blank to be the total number of hours, which means that they will expect the number in the second blank to also include the number of days, but that is not the case here.
So essentially, people will have problems in comprehending what the question is actually asking. And the reason people will have problems is that they're not really paying attention to the shifts, to the exact thing that the question is asking; they are just trying to quickly guess—and guess is the key word here—what the question is asking. These kinds of guesses do not work in Data Insights questions, which do not follow a typical or standard framework.