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Chapter 3 Product & Process Design

Chapter 3 Product & Process Design. Part 1: Product Design. Product/Service Design Process. A process that defines the Appearance and features, Quality characteristics, Spec limits and target levels Inputs (labor, capital, materials) Transformation process

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Chapter 3 Product & Process Design

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  1. Chapter 3Product & Process Design Part 1: Product Design

  2. Product/Service Design Process • A process that defines the • Appearance and features, • Quality characteristics, • Spec limits and target levels • Inputs (labor, capital, materials) • Transformation process • Supply chain – suppliers, channels of distribution of a product/service that a company is planning to produce.

  3. Steps in Product Design Process • Idea Development • Product Screening • Preliminary Design and Testing • Final Design

  4. Idea Development • Someone thinks of a unsatisfied need • Then someone thinks of a product/service to satisfy it • e.g. customers, marketing, engineering, reverse engineering

  5. Idea Development • 2006 Industrial Design Excellent Awards (IDEAs) Winners - (BW, 7/10/06, p. 77) • “Bumpbrella” Concept Umbrella • Company: RKS Design • An inflatable umbrella that uses a bicycle pump in the center for the arm. • A totally new design looking for a company to make it.

  6. Idea Development • 2-Second Tent • Designer: Decathlon, France • Spring hoops allow you to throw this 2-person tent into the air, and it opens before hitting the ground. • Two second to open, 15 seconds to close.

  7. Idea Development

  8. Idea Development • “How Failure Breeds Success” (BW, 7/10/06, p. 48) • “Everyone fears failure. But breakthroughs depend on it.” • “Innovation requires risk-taking.” • “Many companies have found success in the ashes of the memorable misses.”

  9. Idea Development • McDonald’s Hula Burger (1962) • Cheese-topped grilled pineapple on a bun for Chicagoans who avoided eating meat on Fridays. • Big flop! • McDonald’s decided to try something less extreme: • Came up with tastier hamburger-fee alternative: the Filet-O-Fish, now a McDonald’s classic.

  10. Idea Development • Ford’s biggest mistake – 1958 Edsel—lead to its greatest success. • Edsel was called the “Titanic of the auto industry.” • Came in two sizes – big and bigger • Overhyped, oversized, overpriced.

  11. Idea Development

  12. Idea Development • Designed based on a “hunch” about what consumers want. • Abandoned in 1960, just after 2,800 cars produced. • Ford substituted “research” for “hunches.” • Found out that consumers wanted style and affordability • Result? • 1964 Mustang

  13. Idea Development • How do companies get employees to come up with creative and innovative ideas? • By shifting from risk-adverse culture to a risk-taking culture. • In risk-taking culture, employees are encouraged to • Explore, • Experiment, • Foul-up, sometimes • Then repeat.

  14. Idea Development • Shift not easy • Fear of blame for mistakes makes employees want to play it safe and not take risks. • Companies must design performance-management systems that reward risk-taking. • Coca-Cola, Intuit, GE

  15. Idea Development • Coke’s Head of Marketing, Strategy, and Innovation, Mary Minnick idea development strategy • Stop thinking in terms of existing drink categories • Start thinking broadly abut why people consume beverages in the first place. • Then come up with products that satisfy those needs before the competition.

  16. Step 2 - Product Screening • Screen ideas • Some screening criteria are • fit with existing facilities and labor skills, • size of potential market, • expected market share, • share of potential market • expected profit, • break-even point

  17. Step 3 – Preliminary Design and Testing • Suppliers involved, • Transformation process is designed, • Prototype built, • Tricycle developed system for digitally modeling carpets and textiles so manufactures can make prototypes of new designs without making samples for architects and interior designers. • Cuts development costs. (BW, 7/10/06, p.81) • Prototype tested for • Functionality • Acceptance by potential customers

  18. Design and Testing • Corning • Developed new chip in 1998 that would help in DNA research • Killed in 2001 • Customers had not been brought in early enough to help assess its marketability. • Market potential was too small to break-even in a reasonable amount of time.

  19. Step 4 – Final Design • Prototype design is modified based on test results • Final design approved • Production begins

  20. PDCA P = plan D = do C = check (or study) A = act Product Design Idea development Product screening Preliminary design and testing Final design Product Design Process vs. Deming’s PDCA Cycle?

  21. How is Product Design Process Related to Deming’s PDCA Cycle? • Plan • Idea Development • Product screening • Do • Preliminary Design and Testing • Check, Act • Final Design

  22. Good Product Design Process Should: • Design products/services that match the needs and preferences of the targeted customer group • Design products that are as easy as possible to make (product manufacturability). • Use concurrent engineering

  23. Product Manufacturability • Achieve it by • Simplification • Minimize number of parts • Standardization • Design parts for multiply products • Modular (prefabricated) design

  24. Product Manufacturability • Matsushita, Electronic Giant in Japan • One division has 7 factories that make 35 million phone, fax machines, printers and other products annually. • 1,500 shape and color variations in phones alone • Engineers had to rearrange as many as 77 circuit-board parts for each new model.

  25. Product Manufacturability • Setting up production for every type of board was too time consuming. • Company designed a new circuit board that would need only slight changes for each model. • Reduced cycle time and lowered defect rate to under 1%.

  26. Product Manufacturability • Bo Andersson, GM’s head of purchasing, wants GM cars to share more parts, the way Japanese automakers do. • Shared parts results in fewer parts • Fewer parts saves millions. • Also want to ax many of GM’s 3,200 suppliers by weeding out weak suppliers.

  27. Product Manufacturability • Andersson is asking: • Why do we have two dozen different seat frames when Toyota has only two? Answer? • Why do we have 12 V6 engines when Toyota has just a few? • Progress has been made: • GM once had 20 fuel pumps, now it has 5. • Wants to use savings to make better interiors.

  28. Product Manufacturability • Goal is twofold: • to make one part for many models • To reduce number of components in each part.

  29. Product Manufacturability • GM discovered that door hinges on big SUVs and trucks could be made out of 3 components instead of 5. • This would save $21 a truck, or about $100 million over several years. • Designing a new hinge requires months of testing, which is costly. • Must weight costs and benefits.

  30. “Over-the–wall” vs. Concurrent Engineering Design Process • Old “over-the-wall” sequential design process should not be used • Each function did its work and passed it to the next function • Replace with a Concurrent Engineering, wherecross functional design teamswork together to • involve customers early, develop specifications, solve potential problems, reduce costs, & shorten time to market

  31. Concurrent Engineering

  32. Concurrent Engineering • GMs North American operations had completely separate engineering groups for cars and trucks. • Within each group, there were separate teams for almost every type of vehicle. • Each team worked independently

  33. Concurrent Engineering • Engineers and designers had no idea how much money was being wasted making different version of the same things. • Andersson is pushing a company wide effort to break down silos and get divisions talking to one another about how to share parts and save money.

  34. Global Trends in Design • China, Twain, Korea, Hong Kong companies are committing huge resources to product design in order to build global brands. (BW, 7/10/06, p. 77) • They’re competing less and less on price and more on differentiation and value to consumer.

  35. Coke’s Design Process • Anticipate the customer • Coke’s marketers are encouraged to think more creatively about consumer’s needs • Retool tired brands • Cost of launching new brands is expensive • Reposition existing brands • Coke used its Tab brand to create a new energy drink for women • Using Sprite name for a new energy drink in France.

  36. Coke’s Design Process • Engage partners • Coke brings bottlers into the decision-making process to get their input and brings them on board from the outset. • Don’t fear failure

  37. Product Screening Tool – Break-Even Analysis • Is expected sales large enough to exceed the break-even point? • Break-even point (BE) is the number of units of a product/service that a company must sell to cover its total cost. • Break-even point is where total revenue equals total cost, or profit equals zero.

  38. Break-Even Analysis Total Revenue = Total cost or Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost = 0

  39. Notation • Q = expected sales in number of units sold • SP = selling price per unit • F = Total fixed costs • VC = Variable cost per unit

  40. Notation • Total Revenue = (SP)*Q • Total Cost = Total Fixed Cost + Total Variable Cost • Total fixed costs = F • Total Variable Cost = (VC)*Q • Total Cost = F + (VC)*Q

  41. Finding the Break-Even Point • Total Revenue = Total cost • (SP)*Q = F + (VC)*Q (SP)*Q - (VC)*Q = F Q(SP - VC) = F Q = QBE = F/(SP - VC)

  42. Break-Even Decision Rule • If Q > QBE, Total Rev. > Total Cost and Profit > 0 • If Q < QBE, Total Rev. < Total Cost and Profit < 0

  43. Break-Even Analysis

  44. Example 1 • A company is planning to introduce a new product. • The expect to sell 875 units of the new product. • The sales price is set at $25 per unit. • The fixed cost of producing the product is $10,000. • The variable cost per units is $15. • Should the company develop the new product?

  45. Solution to Example 1 • Q = expected sales • SP = selling price per unit =$25 • F = Total fixed costs = $10,000 • VC = Variable cost per unit = $15

  46. Solution to Example 1

  47. Solution to Example 1 • If the company sells 1,000 units of the new product, it will breakeven. • If the company expects to sell more than 1,000, it will make a profit. • If the company sells less than 1,000 units, it will incur a loss. • Since the company expects to sell 875 units, which is less than the BE quantity, the company should not develop the new product.

  48. Example 2 • A company is planning to establish a chain of movie theaters. It estimates that each new theater will cost approximately $1 Million. The theaters will hold 500 people and will have 4 showings each day with average ticket prices at $8. They estimate that concession sales will average $2 per patron. The variable costs in labor and material are estimated to be $6 per patron. They will be open 300 days each year.

  49. Example 2 • What must average occupancy be to break-even? • What is the annual capacity utilization rate? • What is the chains profit if they sell 300,000 ticket next year?

  50. Solution 1. What must average occupancy be to break-even? • Q = ticket sales per year • Total cost = $1,000,000 • Ticket SP = $8 • Concession sales/patron= $2 • Sales revenue/patron = $8 + $2 = $10 • VC = $6

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