This book on Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) introduces the reader to the basic terms and fundamentals of PLM. It provides a solid foundation for starting a PLM development project as well as gives ideas and examples of how PLM can be utilized in various industries. In addition, it offers an insi
Product lifecycle management
β Scribed by Antti Saaksvuori, Anselmi Immonen (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 270
- Edition
- 3
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The significance of product lifecycle management (PLM β Product Lifecycle Management, formerly referred to, in a narrower frame of reference, as PDM β Product Data Management) is increasing, especially for companies in the manufacturing, high technology, and service industries. Product and component lifecycles are shortening while, at the same time, new products must be delivered to market more quickly than before. Many manufacturing and service companies are also trying to grow out of a bulk provider role. In the future they will be p- viding configurable and flexible solutions rather than just individual products. This leads companies to form networks in which each actor specializes in the planning, manufacture or integration of products in a certain field. Information concerning common products must pass quickly, faultlessly, and automatically between companies so that they can compete effectively in international markets. In todayβs industrial production, therefore, PLM is an essential tool for coping with the challenges of more demanding global competition and ever-shortening product and component lifecycles and growing customer needs. New, better and more flexible products must be introduced into markets more quickly, with more profit and less labor, and the lifecycle of each product must be better controlled, for example, from financial and environmental perspectives. Fierce competition in global markets drives companies to perform better. In order to perform well financially, companies must be able to make informed decisions concerning the lifecycle of each product in their portfolio.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Introduction....Pages 1-6
Fundamentals....Pages 7-26
Product lifecycle management systems....Pages 27-44
Product structures....Pages 45-52
Integration of the PLM system with other applications....Pages 53-65
Deployment of the PLM system....Pages 67-89
Business benefits of a PLM system....Pages 91-110
Challenges of product management in manufacturing industry....Pages 111-147
Service industry and PLM....Pages 149-176
The role of product information management in collaborative business development....Pages 177-190
Understanding the product lifecycle....Pages 191-206
Product and product management strategy as a part of business strategy....Pages 207-220
e-Business: electronic business and PLM....Pages 221-227
Digest....Pages 229-231
Back Matter....Pages 234-253
β¦ Subjects
Production/Logistics; Management/Business for Professionals; Engineering Economics, Organization, Logistics, Marketing; Business Information Systems
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>The significance of product lifecycle management (PLM β Product Lifecycle Management, formerly referred to, in a narrower frame of reference, as PDM β Product Data Management) is increasing, especially for companies in the manufacturing, high technology, and service industries. Product and compon
<P>In today`s industrial manufacturing Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) is essential in order to cope with the challenges of more demanding global competition. New and more complex products must be introduced to markets faster than ever before. Companies form large collaborative networks, and the