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Chapter 4

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Title: Chapter 4


1
Chapter 4 6 Product Design
Process Selection-Manufacturing
  • Typical Phases of Product Design Development
  • Concurrent Engineering
  • Designing for the Customer
  • QFD
  • Design for Manufacturability
  • Types of Processes
  • Process Flow Structures
  • Process Flow Design
  • Global Product Design and Manufacturing

2
Whats a Product?
  • Need-satisfying offering of an organization
  • Example
  • PG does not sell laundry detergent
  • PG sells the benefit of clean clothes
  • Customers buy satisfaction, not parts
  • May be a good or service

3
Typical Phases of Product Design Development
  • Concept Development
  • Product Planning
  • Product/Process Engineering
  • Pilot Production/Ramp-Up

4
Concurrent EngineeringDefined
  • Concurrent engineering

5
Designing for the Customer

Ideal Customer Product
6
Product Development Stages
  • Idea generation
  • Assessment of firms ability to carry out
  • Customer Requirements
  • Functional Specification
  • Product Specifications
  • Design Review
  • Test Market
  • Introduction to Market
  • Evaluation

Scope of product development team
Scope of design for manufacturability and value
engineering teams
7
Quality Function Deployment
  • Identify customer wants
  • Identify how the good/service will satisfy
    customer wants
  • Relate customer wants to product hows
  • Identify relationships between the firms hows
  • Develop importance ratings
  • Evaluate competing products

8
Figure 5.5
9
Idea Generation Stage
  • Provides basis for entry into market
  • Sources of ideas
  • Market need (60-80) engineering operations
    (20) technology competitors inventions
    employees
  • Follows from marketing strategy
  • Identifies, defines, selects best market
    opportunities

10
Customer Requirements Stage
  • Identifies positions key product benefits
  • Stated in core benefits proposition (CBP)
  • Example Long lasting with more power (Sears
    Die Hard Battery)
  • Identifies detailed list of product attributes
    desired by customer
  • Focus groups or 1-on-1 interviews

11
Functional Specification Stage
  • Defines product in terms of how the product would
    meet desired attributes
  • Identifies products engineering characteristics
  • Example printer noise (dB)
  • Prioritizes engineering characteristics
  • May rate product compared
  • to competitors

12
Product Specification Stage
  • Determines how product will be made
  • Gives products physical specifications
  • Example Dimensions, material etc.
  • Defined by engineering drawing
  • Done often on computer
  • Computer-Aided
  • Design (CAD)

13
Quality Function Deployment
  • Product design process using cross-functional
    teams
  • Marketing, engineering, manufacturing
  • Translates customer preferences into specific
    product characteristics
  • Involves creating 4 tabular Matrices or
    Houses
  • Breakdown product design into increasing levels
    of detail

14
Few Successes
Number
1750
Market req.
Design review, Testing, Intro.
1000
Functional spec.
Product spec.
Successful product
500
100
25
1
Development Stage
Source Heizer Render, 5th edition
15
Importance of New Products
Percent of Sales from New Products
Position of Firm in Industry
Source Heizer Render, 5th edition
16
Designing for the Customer Value Analysis/Value
Engineering (VA/VE)
  • Achieve equivalent or better performance at a
    lower cost while maintaining all functional
    requirements defined by the customer.

17
Value Engineering Example
3 Pieces
1 Piece
.22 ea.
.10 ea.
18
Design for Manufacturability
  • Traditional Approach
  • Concurrent Engineering

19
Design for Manufacturing and Assembly
  • Greatest improvements related to DFMA arise from
    simplification of the product by reducing the
    number of separate parts

20
Types of Processes
  • Conversion -
  • Fabrication -
  • Assembly -
  • Testing -

21
Process Flow Structures
  • Job shop -
  • Batch shop -
  • Assembly Line -
  • Continuous Flow -

22
Exhibit 5.10
23
Process Flow DesignDefined
  • A process flow design can be defined as a mapping
    of the specific processes that raw materials,
    parts, and subassemblies follow as they move
    through a plant.
  • The most common tools to conduct a process flow
    design include assembly drawings, assembly
    charts, and operation and route sheets.

24
Example Assembly Chart (Gozinto)
From Exhibit 5.14
25
Example Process Flow Chart
Material Received from Supplier
No, Continue
Inspect Material for Defects
Defects found?
Yes
Return to Supplier for Credit
26
Route Sheet
  • Lists all operations

27
Capacity
  • Capacity - number of units produced per time
    period
  • If 6 workers are employed for a process with 11
    machines and each machine produces 25 parts per
    hour, what is the weekly capacity (5 days) for a
    one shift per day operation (8-hours) if each
    machine requires a worker full time?

28
Global Product Design and Manufacturing Strategies
  • Joint Ventures - a parent company selects a
    partner in a foreign country to produce and
    deliver a product in that market - local
    customization
  • Global Product Design Strategy - developing
    standard modules common to all units sold
    globally - customized close to the customer -
    language, electric power

29
Measuring Product Development Performance
  • Time-to-market -
  • Productivity -
  • Quality -
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