1 / 21

Production

Production. The Purpose of Manufacturing and Components Needed to Make It Work. Concept to Distribution. Identify Need. Product and Process Development. Conceptualization. Production and Continuous Improvement. Market Analysis. Concurrent Engineering. Marketing and Distribution.

cprichard
Download Presentation

Production

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. Production The Purpose of Manufacturing and Components Needed to Make It Work

  2. Concept to Distribution Identify Need Product and Process Development Conceptualization Production and Continuous Improvement Market Analysis Concurrent Engineering Marketing and Distribution Research & Development

  3. Conceptualization Brain/Eye The Conceptualization Cycle Paper Hand/Eye

  4. Conceptualization • Specifications-the main task is to determine the design specifications or clarify the design requirements.

  5. Conceptualization

  6. Conceptualization

  7. Concurrent Engineering • Concurrent engineering is a concept to reduce the design cycle and improve product value. • Based on the integrated design of products and manufacturing and support processes. • Manufacturability must be considered from the very start of product development and designed into the product as it is being conceived. • All aspects of manufacturing from customer to marketing need to be involved throughout the process.

  8. Design for Manufacturability Function Safety Customization Cost Customers’ Needs Style Assembly Time to Market Final Design Quality Recycling Reliability Expansion Shipping Human Factors Pollution Serviceability Upgrading Future Designs

  9. Research & Development

  10. Research & Development • Research & Development (R&D) is a process in which new products and new forms of old products are brought into being through technological innovation. • The foundation of any innovation is an invention. • The concept of research is as old as science; the relationship between research and subsequent development was not generally recognized until the 1950’s.

  11. Research & Development • New products and new processes usually have their roots in research and have a path from laboratory idea, through prototype, to manufacturing and production, and finally to market introduction. • Industrial research and development is commonly directed toward a generalized goal, which includes the steps necessary to bring a new or modified product or process into production.

  12. Research & Development History • The first case of a laboratory that spent a significant part of its parent company's revenues was that of the Edison Electric Light Company, which employed a staff of 20 in 1878. • The U.S. National Bureau of Standards was established in 1901, 31 years after its German counterpart. • American companies started to take research seriously just before World War I. General Electric, DuPont, American Telephone & Telegraph, Westinghouse, Eastman Kodak, and Standard Oil set up laboratories for the first time during this period.

  13. Research & Development • The pressure on industry created by the Great Depression in the 1930s, caused companies to seek savings in their research and development expenditure. It was not until World War II that research and development in the United States and Britain returned to previous levels. • Brilliant achievements during WWII by research and development scientists and engineers had produced radar, the atomic bomb, and the V-2 rocket and had created a public awareness of the potential value of research that ensured it a major place in industry.

  14. Research & Development Research and Development Laboratory • Laboratories fall into three clear categories: • Research Laboratories • Development Laboratories • Test Laboratories Research Laboratory • Research labs carry out both pure and applied research work. They usually support a company as a whole, rather than any one department. • Research personnel report to the highest levels of corporate management.

  15. Research & Development Development Laboratory • Development labs are specifically committed to support a particular process or product line. They are normally under the direct control of the department responsible for manufacturing and marketing. • Development labs are used to solve problems by many sections of each company. They maintain close contacts with people in manufacturing, advertising, marketing, sales, and other departments who are responsible for products or processes.

  16. Research & Development Test Laboratory • Test laboratories may serve a whole company or group of companies. They are responsible for monitoring the quality of output. • Test laboratories often require chemical, physical, and metallurgical analyses of incoming materials, as well as checks at every stage of a process. • These laboratories may be a part of a manufacturing organization, but many companies give materials and products to an independent contractor like Underwriters Laboratories.

  17. Market Analysis • Early marketing economists examined industrial markets. This examination resulted in the development of three approaches to the analysis of marketing activity: the commodity, the institution, and the function. • Commodity Analysis studies the ways in which a product or product group is brought to market. • Institutional Analysis describes the types of businesses that play a prevalent role in marketing, such as wholesale or retail institutions. • Functional Analysis examines the general tasks that marketing performs. Also, it ensures that the product is transported from the supplier to the customer.

  18. Market Analysis • Marketing is the process by which a society organizes and distributes its resources to meet the material needs of its citizens. • Large companies began to recognize the importance of market research, better product design, effective distribution, and sustained communication with consumers throughout the 20th century. • It soon became apparent that organizations and individuals market not only goods and services but also ideas (social marketing), places (location marketing), personalities (celebrity marketing), and events (event marketing.

  19. Market Analysis Roles of Marketing • Marketing is the way in which an organization determines its best opportunities in the marketplace, given its objectives and resources. • The marketing process includes the "4 Ps": product, price, place (or distribution), and promotion. This process is followed by evaluating, controlling, and revising the marketing process to achieve the organization's objectives. • Marketing includes selling, advertising, promotion, marketing, product development, packaging, pricing, distribution, and customer service.

  20. Market Analysis • The marketing department may include brand and product managers, marketing researchers, sales representatives, advertising and promotion managers, pricing specialists, and customer service personnel. • The strategic phase of marketing has three components: Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning. • The organization must distinguish among different groups of customers in the market (segmentation), choose which group(s) it can serve effectively (targeting), and communicate the central benefit it offers to that group (positioning).

  21. Market Analysis • The philosophy of marketing puts central emphasis on customer satisfaction as the means for gaining and keeping loyal customers. • Marketing’s role is to carefully and continually gauge target customers' expectations and to consistently meet or exceed these expectations. • Marketing, consequently, is far too important to be done solely by the marketing department.

More Related