1 / 27

Prototyping

Prototyping . Created by: Amanda Quintanar October 9, 2001 OP 380 Dr. Tom Foster Boise State University. What will be covered:. What is Prototyping? How can Prototyping be used in business? The nuts and bolts of Prototyping How Prototyping works

benjy
Download Presentation

Prototyping

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prototyping Created by: Amanda Quintanar October 9, 2001 OP 380 Dr. Tom Foster Boise State University

  2. What will be covered: • What is Prototyping? • How can Prototyping be used in business? • The nuts and bolts of Prototyping • How Prototyping works • An example of how Prototyping is utilized in business • Summary

  3. An ExerciseSlide 1 of 3 • Close your eyes. • Imagine a vehicle with four doors • Imagine the road you are driving on • Imagine the music playing on the radio

  4. An ExerciseSlide 2 of 3 • Of course everyone one of us imagined a different vehicle • Everyone of us imagined different scenery • Everyone imagined different music playing

  5. An ExerciseSlide 3 of 3 • Prototyping can help everyone visualize the same end result. • There is no ambiguity • Everyone is on the same page

  6. What is Prototyping? Slide 1 of 3 • A prototype, according to Webster’s dictionary, is “an original model after which other similar things are patterned.” • This definition is “an iterative approach to design in which a series of product mock-ups are developed until the customer and designer agree on the final design.”

  7. What is Prototyping?Slide 2 of 3 • There are several types of Prototyping • (i.e. Rapid Prototyping, Basic Prototyping, CAD,Paper Prototype) • Different industries use different techniques

  8. What is Prototyping?Slide 3 of 3 • Utilized by virtually every business • Tool to help businesses stay on top of the competition in terms of new products • Aids companies in developing quality products by allowing the prototype to be but through rigorous testing before production on the product take s place to ensure that it is durable and reliable

  9. How can Prototyping be used in business?Slide 1 of 3 • Virtually every business uses Prototyping • A wide range of business use prototypes from airplane manufacturers to toy producers to computer system developers • Prototypes are one of the most useful and cost-effective quality tools businesses have

  10. How can Prototyping be used in business?Slide 2 of 3 • Prototypes can be a source of creativity • Prototypes allow the user to interact with the product so the developer can receive feedback. • Prototyping is not limited to product development. • Can also be used as process development.

  11. How can Prototyping be used in business?Slide 3 of 3 • Every department can use prototypes to help them excel • For example, marketing departments use prototyping to determine why consumers buy products.

  12. Benefits of prototypingSlide 1 of 1 • Allows all departments to be on the same page • A model allows them to see, touch, and handle the product • Clarifies communication • Effective project management tool • Handy at design reviews G Thomas Clay. “Rapid prototyping accelerates the design process.” Machine Design, Cleveland; Mar 9, 2000; Vol. 72, Iss. 5; pg. 166, 4 pgs

  13. The nuts and bolts of PrototypingSlide 1 of 4 • Planning and goal setting • The design process • Prototype construction • Analyzing the concept 5. Prototype rollout 6. Evolution of the design

  14. The nuts and bolts of PrototypingSlide 2 of 4 There are 6 basic steps to developing a prototype • Planning and goal setting • Sets the tone for the rest of the process • The design process • Important to pick one distinct prototype technique and stick with it. • Prototype construction • Cost and timelines are very important in this stage

  15. The nuts and bolts of PrototypingSlide 3 of 4 4. Analyzing the concept • This is primarily measured by focus groups and technology • Benchmarking 5. Prototype rollout • Always have a backup plan • Changes can be made to design as it becomes apparent which aspects work and which do not

  16. The nuts and bolts of PrototypingSlide 4 of 4 6. Evolution of the design • Communication is essential in this final stage. • Feedback should be given on the prototype and suggestions on how to improve Anonymous. “Prototypes: From concept to rollout.” Chain Store Age, New York; May 1999; Vol. 75, Iss. 5; pg. 199, 1 pgs.

  17. How Prototyping works • Several types of Prototypes • Depending on the industry/product different techniques are used

  18. How Prototyping worksBasic Prototype • “Nonworking mockup of the product that can be reviewed by customers prior to acceptance.” • Sometimes these basic prototypes are used at trade shows • For example, the auto industry refers to them as concept cars. Foster, Dr. Thomas. Managing Quality: An integrative Approach. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001.

  19. How Prototyping worksPaper Prototypes • Series of drawings that are created by the developers that are used to obtain the acceptance by decision makers. • For example, sticky notes are used when designing Graphical User Interfaces so users can see the proposal Foster, Dr. Thomas. Managing Quality: An integrative Approach. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001.

  20. How Prototyping worksRapid Prototyping • Rapid Prototyping is used to accelerate the design process • Leads to high quality, defect free products and reduces risk • This technique has proven essential to market leaders such as Microsoft, Intel and Cisco

  21. How Prototyping worksCAD System and Multi-user CAD • CAD-computer aided design • Can be used to design anything • Improve ability of designers • Simplify process of prototyping • Reengineered the innovation of global manufacturers

  22. An Example of how Prototyping is utilized in business : Microsoft and Internet Explorer 3.0Slide 1 of 3 • Behind in the development of an internet browser • Started development November 1, 1995 • Made the project a “company –wide emergency” • Needed architecture that allowed parallel development in order to reach target date

  23. An Example of how Prototyping is utilized in business : Microsoft and Internet Explorer 3.0Slide 2 of 3 • March 1996-Feedback was received with only 30% of system was complete • April 1996-Beta version was dispersed to general public • Customers could give input on the product • Integration of new features continued through final weeks

  24. An Example of how Prototyping is utilized in business : Microsoft and Internet Explorer 3.0Slide 3 of 3 • Successful because of the techniques used developing the software and “componentizing the product” • Obviously, Microsoft was very successful with this product • Able to maintain quality standards Alan MacCormack. “Product-development practices that work: How Internet companies build software.” MIT Sloan Management Review, Cambridge; Winter 2001; Vol. 42, Iss. 2; pg. 75, 10 pgs

  25. SummarySlide 1 of 1 • Prototyping allows all departments and key personnel to see the same vision • There are many different techniques to use • Six basic steps for whatever the technique may be • Great quality tool to utilize

  26. BibliographySlide 1 of 2 Brian Wansink. “New techniques to generate key marketing insights.” Marketing Research, Chicago; Summer 2000; Vol. 12, Iss. 2; pg. 28, 9 pgs Charmaine Jones. “Perfecting the prototype.” Appliance Manufacturer, Troy; Aug 2001; Vol. 49, Iss. 8; pg. 49, 2 pgs Donna Mitchell. “Virtual prototyping.” Printed Circuit Design, San Francisco; Dec 2000; Vol. 17, Iss. 12; pg. 26, 3 pgs Jim Holt. “Prototype power.” Management Review, New York; Jan 2000; Vol. 89, Iss. 1; pg. 14, 1 pgs Tom Mueller. “ Rapid prototyping = risk reduction.” Molding Systems, Dearborn; Apr 1999; Vol. 57, Iss. 4; pg. 40, 7 pgs Bill Schweber “Prototyping tools transform design dreams into reality.” EDN, Boston; May 13, 1999; Vol. 44, Iss. 10; pg. 75, 6 pgs Alan MacCormack. “Product-development practices that work: How Internet companies build software.” MIT Sloan Management Review, Cambridge; Winter 2001; Vol. 42, Iss. 2; pg. 75, 10 pgs

  27. BibliographySlide 2 of 2 Wilhelm Hasselbring “Programming languages and systems for prototyping concurrent applications.” ACM Computing Surveys, Baltimore; Mar 2000; Vol. 32, Iss. 1; pg. 43, 37 pgs Tom Kelley “Prototyping is the shorthand of innovation.”Design Management Journal, Boston; Summer 2001; Vol. 12, Iss. 3; pg. 35, 8 pgs Michael Schrage. “Howprototypes can change your business.” Across the Board, New York; Jan 2000; Vol. 37, Iss. 1; pg. 43, 5 pgs Anonymous. “Prototypical solutions.”; Chain Store Age, New York; Jul 2001; Vol. 77, Iss. 7; pg. 96, 2 pgs G Thomas Clay. “Rapid prototyping accelerates the design process.” Machine Design, Cleveland; Mar 9, 2000; Vol. 72, Iss. 5; pg. 166, 4 pgs Anonymous. “Prototypes: From concept to rollout.” Chain Store Age, New York; May 1999; Vol. 75, Iss. 5; pg. 199, 1 pgs. Foster, Dr. Thomas.Managing Quality: An integrative Approach. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001.

More Related