Title: Electronic Design Project
1Electronic Design Project
ELE 1EDP
Unit Overview and an Introduction to ELECTRONIC
SYSTEMS DESIGN
George Alexander G.Alexander_at_latrobe.edu.au http/
/www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/
23 July, 2007
2Todays Lecture
- General introduction
- Engineering Design within the business process
3Topics over next 6 weeks
- Today
- General overview of unit
- Electronic Systems Design business context
- Over following 5 weeks
- More on the Electronic Systems Design Process
- Introduction to project management
4Contact Details
Lecturer George Alexander Department Electroni
c Engineering Office Physical Sciences 2 PS2
129B E-mail G.Alexander_at_latrobe.edu.au Phone
9479 3024 Website www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/ A
vailability Mon, Wed, Fri
PLEASE NOTE when e-mailing type ELE1EDP in the
subject field
5ELE1EDP Unit Structure
- Unit and Lab Co-ordinator Geoffrey Tobin
- There are two distinct streams
- Electronic Design
- 67 of overall unit assessment
- Consists of lectures/labs
- Engineering in Society
- 33 of overall unit assessment
- Consists of lectures/tutorials
6Timetable
- LECTURES
- Monday 1000 PS2 110
- Monday 1100 PS2 110
- Wednesday 0800 Undercroft
- Lab sessions (2hr)
- Monday 15.00 BG 320/324
- Wednesday 11.00 BG 320/324
- Tutorials (1hr)
- Monday 14.00 PS2 110
- Wednesday 10.00 PS2 110
- Wednesday 11.00 PS2 110
- Refer notice board for lab/tutorial allocations
7Assessment Electronic Design part, 67
- 1-hour examination (closed book) 30
- Major project 50
- Laboratory work 20
Assessment of the Engineering in Society part
will be explained by Jim Royston on Wednesday.
8Reading
- Australian Standard 1000
- Standards Association of Australia
- Digital Systems, Principles and Applications
- Tocci, R.J. and Widmer, N.S. 8th edition,
Prentice-Hall, 2001 - Project Management From Idea to Implementation
- Haynes, M.E. Kogan Page, 1990
9Lecture Notes (EDP and PM)
- Available
- at lectures
- from filing cabinet in PS2
- at website
- http//www.latrobe.edu.au/eemanage/
10Approach to the topic
- Outline of the business context of Electronic
Systems Design - Presentation of the principles of Electronic
Systems Design (based on notes prepared by Jim
Whittington, School of Electronic Engineering). - Some practical insights into how these principles
have applied in practice in a leading
telecommunications company. - Relate this to the EDP project
11Background George Alexander
- BSc (Eng) Edinburgh 1967
- MBA Deakin 1986
- Manufacturing
- Logistics, production, engineering including
maintenance, production eng, test eng, QA - Design
- Hardware, software projects. Business support
- Consulting/Project Management
12ERICSSON
- Headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden
- Currently employs 64,000 people in 140 countries
16,000 in RD (Telstra 50,000) - Largest global supplier of mobile systems
- 40 of total traffic through Ericsson systems
- 2006 sales A30bn (Telstra A23bn)
- In partnership with Sony to produce mobile
handsets - In Australia
- Main customers Telstra, Vodafone, Hutchison
- Regional support for Asia Pacific region
- Until 2003, major design centre
13ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT
14Engineers Australia Accreditation
The study of Engineering Management is one of the
requirements for accreditation of engineering
courses, which is set by Engineers Australia.
15Engineering Management - because
- Engineers invariably operate in a managed
business environment. - We need to understand how our own roles relate to
the business and its objectives. - Who does what, and why?
- How can we as engineers positively influence the
business outcomes.
16Other ELE management units
- ELE1EDP
- Introduction to general engineering/management
issues - ELE2EMT (not available after 2007)
- Management Principles
- Engineering Economics
- Accounting
- ELE3EMT (not available after 2007)
- Research skills, presentation skills, report
writing - Job seeking skills
- ELE4EMT
- Marketing, legal principles
- Innovation, business planning
- These units will be incorporated, in part, in
ELE3PRJ and ELE4EMT from 2008 on.
17Design and the Business Process
- A customer need
- Customer calls for tenders.
- Suppliers submit tenders.
- Customer selects successful tender.
- Contract is signed.
- Supplier delivers according to contract terms,
conditions and technical spec.
18THE TENDER DOCUMENT
- Instructions to Tenderers
- Commercial Terms Conditions
- Price basis (e.g. Tax, FOB, materials/service,
etc.) - Terms of payment
- Legal clauses
- Basis for contract
- Technical Specifications
- Functional requirements
- Performance requirements
- Operational and maintenance requirements, etc.
- Appendices (Drawing, Data, etc.)
19Technical Specification Considerations
- The cost of a system (or a piece of equipment) is
directly proportional to its reliability. - The fee for providing a service is also directly
proportional to the level of service. - Telecommunication service providers are bound by
a Service Level Agreement (SLA). - An SLA documents service parameters that can be
reasonably measured (availability, Response Time,
Channel Bandwidth, etc.)
20The Concept of Availability
Reliability
Maintainability
Availability
21EXAMPLE OF A SYSTEM TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION
- Scope
- Requirements
- System Definition
- System Characteristics
- Design and Construction
- Documentation / Data
- Logistics
- Producibility
- Test and Evaluation
- Quality Assurance, OHS Provisions
- Preparation for Delivery
22TENDERING COSTS MONEY
- Preparation of the tender document
- Identification of needs
- Requirements formulation
- Technical specification writing
- Commercial terms and conditions
- Responding to a tender (bidding)
- Analysing the document
- Systems design and costing
- Evaluation of responses and follow up
23BIDDING PROCESS
- Bidding Team
- Sales and Marketing (Commercial)
- Engineering/Project Management
- Tender Analysis (clause by clause response)
- Bid/No Bid Decision (SWOT analysis)
- System Planning and Design
- Costing and Price Formulation
- Tender Response Submission
- Follow up
24TENDER ASSESSMENT
- Commercial Compliance
- Price too low (buying the job, inexperience,
etc.) - New information about the tenderer
- Unacceptable conditions included with tender
- Construction time
- Unbalanced bid (lump sum/rate for additional
work) - Technical Compliance
- Full compliance / Partial compliance
- Meets and exceeds requirements
25EXCEEDING THE BUDGET
- Extremely high tender price, what are the
reasons? - If all the tenders are above the budget estimate,
the principal has five options - Proceed on revised budget, or
- Abandon the project, or
- Call for tenders from different tenderers, or
- Make savings (reduce requirements), or
- Negotiate with tenderers (must be fair to all)
- Price variations can happen during the project,
why?
26AWARD OF CONTRACT
- The principal and the successful tenderer
(bidder) enter into a contract. - The tender document, along with any amendments
during the bidding process, will be the basis of
the contract. - A project manager on each side (principal
tenderer) will be assigned to the project. - Project review meetings and progress monitoring
27NEVER FORGET!
- THE CUSTOMER
- VALUE
- THE NEED TO DELIVERY VALUE TO THE CUSTOMER
28Next week
- Next week, we will look in more detail at whats
involved in the Engineering Design Process. - Thanks for your attention