Engineers and scientists often need to sell an innovative idea for a new product to top management. Those who occupy product planning positions also need to be constantly scanning ideas for improving value. The engineer as product planner must learn to think like its major competitor using customer
Value Driven Product Planning and Systems Engineering
β Scribed by H. E. Cook PhD, L. A. Wissmann (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag London
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 219
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Engineers and scientists often need to sell an innovative idea for a new product or a new product improvement to top management. Sometimes their tendency is to focus on the "WOW!" of the new technology at the expense of making a convincing business case. When the new technology represents a large cost reduction, there will be much less of a problem in convincing management to approve the project if the investment level is acceptable. The major rub comes when the new feature or technology is an improvement in customer value that also generates an increase in cost. This makes the sell difficult in spite of the fact that many of the inventive products available today are widely used because they provide very high value in relation to their added cost.
Engineers and scientists also occupy product planning positions where they need to be constantly scanning ideas for improving value that comes both from inside and outside the company to see if they make sense to incorporate in a future product. At the same time they need to anticipate what their major competitors are likely to do to improve their next generation of product. These problems are exacerbated in todayβs global economy because the number of competitors has increased markedly in many product segments and there are many technological alternatives available for consideration. The problem of anticipating the moves of your major competitor is particularly challenging because most firms keep plans very secure. The engineer as product planner must learn to think like its major competitor using customer value as a guide.
Value Driven Product Planning and Systems Engineering provides essential support for engineers and scientists who are required to make realistic business cases for new innovative product concepts.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xvii
Customer Value: A Key Financial Metric....Pages 1-16
Assessing Value Using Surveys....Pages 17-31
Analyzing Stated Choice Surveys....Pages 33-58
Product Planning and Systems Engineering....Pages 59-84
Value Speculation in a Stockβs Price....Pages 85-90
Simulated Survey of Boston to Los Angeles Flights....Pages 91-96
Analysis of a Multinomial Stated Choice Survey....Pages 97-102
The Market for Hybrid and Diesel Mid-sized Sedans....Pages 103-109
Revealed Values: Minivan Trends....Pages 111-114
Effect of Market Dilution When Value Differs between Competitors....Pages 115-118
Value of Interior Noise in a Luxury Automobile....Pages 119-126
Quantifying the Trade-off between Acceleration Performance and Fuel Economy....Pages 127-132
Value of Mustang Options....Pages 133-139
Simulated Survey of Choice between Auto and Transit Bus Modes....Pages 141-147
Assessing Relative Brand Value....Pages 149-152
Value and Cost Benchmarking a Yogurt Market....Pages 153-157
Back Matter....Pages 159-213
β¦ Subjects
Engineering Design; Automotive and Aerospace Engineering, Traffic; Production/Logistics; Engineering Economics, Organization, Logistics, Marketing; Manufacturing, Machines, Tools
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