Title: TECH 313 Product Design and Development
1TECH 313Product Design and Development
- Day 2Wednesday, January 7th 2009
- Dr. Seaman
2Chapter 2 Development Processes and Organizations
3Objectives of this Lecture
- After this lecture, students should be able to
answer the following questions - What are the different functions in a product
development organization and what do they do? - What does a generic product development process
look like? - Why is a process important?
- How can the project team structure be mapped onto
the overall product development organization of a
firm? - What are the strengths and weaknesses of
different organizational firms?
4Case Study AMF Bowling
- AMF Bowling is the leading manufacturer of
bowling equipment. The Capital Equipment
Division of AMF manufactures bowling alley
equipment such as pin spotters, ball returns and
scoring equipment. Several years ago, the
general manager of the division asked the head of
engineering to develop a well-defined and generic
product development organization that would
enable AMF to compete effectively over the next
decade.
5A GenericDevelopment Process
6- A product development process is the sequence of
steps or activities which an enterprise employs
to conceive, design, and commercialize a
product.- Karl T. Ulrich and Steven D. Eppinger
7A Well-defined Development Process is useful for
the following reasons
- Quality assurance
- Following the process is one way to assure the
quality of the product - Coordination
- It helps act like a master plan to let team
members know when to contribute and whom to work
with to exchange information materials - Planning
- Built in milestones related to each phase
- Management
- Able to assess performance of the ongoing
development effort - Improvement
- Good documentation helps to I.D. opportunities to
improve
8Six Phases of the Generic Development Process
- Marketing
- Design
- Manufacturing
9(No Transcript)
10Concept Development
11The Front End Process
The activities below are not always linear in
fashion. The activities may overlap in terms of
time and iteration (repetition) is often
necessary due to newinformation or results.
12Identifying Customer Needs
- Important to know their needs and effectively
communicate them to the development team. - Output results in
- Customer needs statements
- Organized in a hierarchical order
- Each need is assigned a rating of importance
13Establishing Target Specifications
- Specifications define what the product is
supposed to do. - Serves as a translation of customer needs into
technical terms. - Target specs are set early and refined as the
team zeros in on a choice of product concept.
14Concept Generation
- The goal is to thoroughly explore the space of
product concepts that may address the customer
needs. - Consists of
- External searches
- Creative problem solving within the team
- Results in maybe 10 to 20 concepts, each with a
sketch and brief description - Assignment 1 for you will address this!
15Concept Selection
- A process where each concept is evaluated to
identify the most promising concepts. - Requires several iterations and may cause
additional concept generation and refinement.
16Concept Testing
- One or more concepts are tested to verify the
customer needs have been met. - To also assess the market potential of the
product. - I.D. any shortcomings before any further
development. - Poor customer feedback could result in
terminating a project.
17Setting Final Specifications
- Previous target specifications are revisited
AFTER a concept has been selected and tested. - The project team needs to commit to specific
values of metrics for the final specifications. - Technical modeling done and they look at
trade-offs between cost and performance.
18Project Planning
- During this final activity the team
- Creates a detailed development schedule
- Comes up with a strategy to minimize development
time - I.D. resources required to complete the project
19The result Contract Book
- Contains
- Mission statement
- Customer needs
- Details of the selected concept
- Product specifications
- Economic analysis of the product
- Development schedule
- Project staffing
- Budget
20Adapting the Generic Product Development Process
21Generic (Market Pull)
- A firm begins with a market opportunity, then
finds appropriate technologies to meet customer
needs - Examples
- Most sporting goods (golf putters)
- Furniture (IKEA)
- Tools
22Technology-Push Products
- A firm begins with a new technology, then finds
an appropriate market - the post-it note
- Gore-Tex Rainwear
- Planning phase involves matching the technology
to the market
23Platform Products
- A firm assumes that the new product will be built
around an established technological sub-system - Consumer electronics, computers, printers
- PT Cruiser Dodge Neon
24Process-Intensive Products
- Characteristics of the product are highly
constrained by the production process. - Both the product and the process must be
developed together from the very start, or an
existing production process must be identified
first - Frito-Lay snack foods, chemicals,
semi-conductors, computer memory
25Customized Products
- New products are slight variations of existing
configurations. - Examples include
- Switches
- Motors
- Batteries
- Containers
- i.e. Pepsi bottles and other drink packages for
markets around the world
26The AMF Development Process
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29Product Development Organizations
- Successful firms need to effectively organize
their product development staffs. Lets look at
several types of organizations.
30Organizations Are Formed by Establishing Links
among Individuals
- Reporting relationships
- Financial arrangements
- Physical layout
31Organizational Links May Be Aligned with
Functions, Projects, or Both
32(No Transcript)
33Choosing an Organizational Structure
- Organizational structure depends on
organizational performance factors critical to
success. - Functional organizations have specializations and
expertise in functional areas. - Project organizations are better suited to enable
rapid and effective coordination among diverse
functions. - Matrix organizations (hybrids) contain a little
of both.
34Matrix Organizations
35Group Work for Chapter 2
36Group Work for Chapter 2
- Reports from each group on the set of questions
given - Lets review
37The AMF Organization
- Decided to adopt a matrix structure for its
product development staff. - General Manager
- Functional Manager (each mgr. reports to G.M.)
- Engineering
- Manufacturing
- Marketing
- Sales
- Purchasing
- Quality assurance
38The AMF Organization
- Product Development Projects
- Led by Project Manager
- The are Project Teams
- Team members for each Project Team are pulled
from the functional areas of - Engineering
- Manufacturing
- Marketing
- Sales
- Purchasing
- Quality assurance
39The AMF Organization
- AMF Matrix Organization
- Resembles a lightweight project organization.
- Why? Project managers are NOT the most senior
level mangers and therefore lack direct control
over resources (budget) and staffing (people) for
the PROJECT TEAMS and, - AMF has many small projects and a few big
projects ongoing. The mixed size of projects has
team members committed on a part-time basis. - People (less than 100 salaried employees) work in
the Capital Equipment Division with sales over
100 million. - Small division with employees sharing financial
rewards when their division is profitable!
40The AMF Organization
- Project managers are held responsible for
successful projects. A Project Manager from a
functional area is responsible for the overall
success and not just in his or her functional
area! - General managers (senior management) influence
on product development and personal interest in
each of their associated projects contributes to
the overall success of the project(s). - The Division message is on successful products
rather than strong functional areas.
41What happened to AMF Bowling Worldwide in 2001?
- http//www.scripophily.net/amfcompany.html
42QUBICA AMF
43Diagram a process for planning and cooking a
family dinner. Does your process resemble the
generic product development process? Is cooking
dinner analogous to a market-pull,
technology-push, process-intensive, or
customization process?
44One process might consist of the following steps
- Ask spouse, children, or roommates what they feel
like eating and when they would like to eat. - Survey available ingredients.
- Generate three or so alternatives that are both
feasible and meet the desires of the other
diners. - Select an alternative through a survey or by a
subjective judgment. - Plan (usually informally and intuitively) the
best sequence for preparing the food. - Cook and serve.
- Reflect on the results and the process (just
kidding).
45Objectives of this Lecture
- You should be able to answer the following
questions - What are the different functions in a product
development organization and what do they do? - What does a generic product development process
look like? - Why is a process important?
- How can the project team structure be mapped onto
the overall product development organization of a
firm? - What are the strengths and weaknesses of
different organizational firms?
46Assignment 1 Overview
- Individual Assignment
- Refer to handout
47Product Categories
- Outdoors/Sports
- Entertainment
- Garden
- Parenting/Baby
- Office Supplies
- Computer accessories
- Kitchen products
- Car/Truck /Motorcycle 3rd party accessories
- Communication Devices accessories
48Where can you go to research existing products?
- Staples Office Depot Office Max
- Pep Boys
- ?
- ?
- ?
- ?
49Assignment 1 Directions
50Reminders for Next Time
- Quiz 1 over Chapter 2
- 5 questions
- Individual Project proposals
- Focus is on marketing opportunity and not
solution concepts at this time! - Assignment 1a 1-page proposal handouts
- For 3 potential projects
- Assignment 1b Proposal Presentations
- 60 seconds per project proposal