New Product Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

New Product Development

Description:

Market Pull ('We Make What We Can Sell') food industry ... all other parts to allow the disassembly of the product for adjustment or maintenance? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:46
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: nanyangb
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: New Product Development


1
New Product Development
  • New Product Development Process
  • Designing for the Customer
  • Designing for Manufacturability
  • Economic Analysis of Development Projects
  • Measuring Product Development Performance

2
What is a Product?
  • Need-satisfying
  • A restaurant
  • A university
  • A computer manufacturer
  • Customers buy satisfaction, not parts
  • May be a good or a service

5-4
3
Product Components
4
Some Hard Facts
5
Why Do So Many New Product Ideas Fail?
  • What the Customer Wants
  • What the firm can manufacture
  • What the customer can afford
  • What the firm wants to produce

6
Product Design
7
New Product Development Process
(NPD)http//www.npd-solutions.com/
8
Generation of NP Opportunities
  • Economic change
  • Sociological and demographic change
  • Technological change
  • Political/legal change
  • Changes in
  • market practice
  • professional standards
  • suppliers and distributors

9
Strategies for NP Introduction
  • Market Pull (We Make What We Can Sell)
  • food industry
  • Technology Push (We Sell What We Can Make)
  • electronics
  • Interfunctional View
  • personal computers

10
Typical NPD Process
  • Planning
  • Concept Development
  • System-Level design
  • Design Detail
  • Testing and Refinement
  • Production Ramp-up

11
New Product Design Process
Pilot production/testing
12
New Product Design Process
  • To be ISO 9000 certified, an organization must
    define and follow a new product design process.
  • ISO International Organization for Standards.

13
Cross Functional Product Design
14
  • 2. Designing for the Customer

15
Gap Theory
16
Why Dont Different Areas Cooperate?
  • They dont speak the same language.
  • They have different performance measures.
  • They tend to have different personality types,
    i.e. they dont think alike.
  • They are defensive about their own turfs.
  • They are in different physical locations.
  • They dont have time.

17
Designing for the Customer
House of Quality
Ideal Customer Product
18
Quality Function Deployment (QFD)
  • Also known as House of Quality
  • Developed in Japan in 1972.
  • Tool for concurrent design of products
  • Customer Attributes (Voice of the Customer)
  • Engineering Characteristics (Voice of the
    Engineer)
  • Tradeoffs
  • Competitors Comparison

19
The House of Quality
Customer requirements information forms the basis
for this matrix, used to translate them into
operating or engineering goals.
20
Value Analysis/Value Engineering
  • Achieve equivalent or better performance at a
    lower cost while maintaining all functional
    requirements defined by the customer
  • Does the item have any design features that are
    not necessary?
  • Can two or more parts be combined into one?
  • How can we cut down the weight?
  • Are there nonstandard parts that can be
    eliminated?

21
3.Design for Manufacturability
  • Value Analysis (or engineering)
  • Modular Design

22
Design for Manufacturability
Concurrent Engineering
Traditional Approach
Design Ensure Effective Production
Process Meet design requirements
Lets work together simultaneously
We design it, You build it
23
Design for Manufacturing and Assembly
  • Greatest improvements related to DFMA arise from
    simplification of the product by reducing the
    number of separate parts
  • During the operation of the product, does the
    part move relative to all other parts already
    assembled?
  • Must the part be of a different material or be
    isolated from other parts already assembled?
  • Must the part be separate from all other parts to
    allow the disassembly of the product for
    adjustment or maintenance?

24
Value Analysis (or Engineering)
  • Simplifications of products and processes
  • Terms in Value Analysis
  • Objective primary purpose of the product
  • Basic Function Makes the objective possible
  • Secondary Function How to perform the basic
    function
  • Value analysis seeks to improve the secondary
    function, e.g. how to open a can or make a tool
    box.

25
Objectives of Value Analysis
  • Enhance the design of a good or service to
    provide higher quality at the same price, or the
    same quality at a lower price.
  • Modify the design of production process to lower
    the cost of a good or service while maintaining
    or improving quality.
  • In other words, improve the ratio of usefulness
    (quality) to cost.

26
DFM An Example
27
DFM An Example (contd)
  • Original Design
  • 24 different parts to assemble
  • 7 unique parts to manage in inventory
  • Revised Design
  • 4 different parts to assemble
  • 3 unique parts to manage in inventory
  • Final Design
  • 2 parts to assemble and manage

28
Modular Design
  • Allows greater variety through mixing and
    matching of modules
  • Develops a series of basic product components
    (modules) for later assembly into multiple
    products
  • Reduces complexity and costs associated with
    large number of product variations
  • Easy to subcontract production of modules

29
Danas Rolling Chassis
A module they make for Chrysler.
30
4. Economic Analysis
  • Product Life cycle
  • Financial Analysis

31
Economic Analysis
  • Using measurable factors to help determine
  • Operational design and development decisions
  • Go/no-go milestones
  • Building a Base-Case Financial Model
  • A financial model consisting of major cash flows
  • Sensitivity Analysis for what if questions

32
Product Life Cycle, Sales, Cost and Profit
Cost of Development Manufacture
Sales Revenue
Net Revenue
Loss
Time
Introduction
Maturity
Decline
Growth
33
Products in Various Stages of Life Cycle
34
Basis Financial Analysis
  • Assess the (life-time) profit (in net present
    value) of a new product
  • Cost Structure
  • Development cost
  • Ramp-up cost
  • Marketing and support cost
  • Production cost, etc.
  • Sales projection

35
Financial Analysis an Example
  • Cost data and sales project
  • Cash flow
  • Net present value
  • Sensitivity analysis

36
5. Measuring Product Development Performance
  • Time to market
  • Productivity, Quality, Profit, etc

37
Time to Market
  • Frequency of new products introduced
  • Time to market introduction
  • Number stated and number completed
  • Actual versus plan
  • Percentage of sales from new products

38
Percent of Sales From New Product
39
New Product Development Cycle
  • Development CycleTime from concept development
    to commercial production

19th century 70 years
WWI WWII 40years
After WWII to 60s 20 years
After 70s 5-10 years
Now Less than 3 years
40
Productivity, Quality, and Others
Measures
Performance Dimension
  • Engineering hours per project
  • Cost of materials and tooling per project
  • Actual versus plan
  • Profit

Productivity
  • Conformance-reliability in use
  • Design-performance and customer satisfaction

Quality
41
End Q A
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com