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PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327. 2. Outline. CAIV Implementation FrameworkReview of 1998 TCBP StudyDiagnostic Tool OverviewTCBP Implementation Survey ResultsDiagnostic Tool RefinementsCurrent State of CAIV in DoDNext Steps. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327. 3. . process. CAI
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1. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 1 Target Costing Best Practices and Implications for CAIV Implementation Peter J. Braxton, Richard L. Coleman, Northrop Grumman IT – TASC
Tami L. Capperauld, The Boeing Company
Dan W. Swenson, Arizona State University (ASU) West
Cari L. Pullen, Tecolote Research, Inc.
CAM-I Cost Management Systems (CMS) Target Costing Interest Group
DoN Acquisition Reform Office (ARO)
2. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 2 Outline CAIV Implementation Framework
Review of 1998 TCBP Study
Diagnostic Tool Overview
TCBP Implementation Survey Results
Diagnostic Tool Refinements
Current State of CAIV in DoD
Next Steps
3. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 3 CAIV Principles and Tenets
4. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 4 CAIV Culture and Infrastructure
5. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 5 CAIV Tools and Processes
6. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 6 Target Cost Best Practices Study (1998) Phase I
7. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 7 Target Cost Best Practices (TCBP) Study (1998) Co-sponsored by:
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)
The University of Akron, Ohio
Researchers:
Dr. Shahid Ansari, California State University Northridge
Dr. Jan Bell, California State University Northridge
Dr. Il-Woon Kim, University of Akron
Dr. Dan Swenson, Idaho State University
Statisticians:
Peter Braxton, Richard Coleman
Final Report published March, 1999
8. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 8 TCBP Study (1998) Components:
TCBP Survey
American Site Visits
Boeing, Caterpillar, Chrysler, Continental Teves (formerly ITT Automotive)
Japanese Site Visits
Literature Survey
Purpose:
Identify practices of U.S. Target Costing companies
Compare to Japanese practices
Reasons for not adopting and barriers to improvement
9. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 9 TCBP Survey (1998) 120 Respondents:
48 “Adopters”
72 “Non-Adopters”
Company information (confidential)
34 multi-part questions
Many “one through five” type (Likert scale)
Not Important, … , Very Important
Strongly Agree, … , Strongly Disagree
Two sections:
Questions 1-18 answered by all respondents
Questions 19-34 answered by Target Cost practitioners (“Adopters”) only
10. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 10 Statistical tests conducted
t test for difference of means
chi square test for difference of “profiles”
sign test for significance of trends
Spearman and Kendall tests for correlation
alpha = 0.05
Results legend:
= Statistically Significant
= Correlation
= No Correlation Survey – Statistical Analysis
11. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 11 Target Costing Tools Cross-functional teams (IPTs) for problem solving
Single most used tool
Correlated with all other tools
Multi-year product & profit planning
DTC (cost objectives, goals, and thresholds throughout)
DFMA (optimize interactions)
Continuous Improvement activities (Kaizen)
TQM
Benchmarking
Value Engineering (includes performance trades)
Competitor cost analysis
QFD (document and understand requirements)
12. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 12 Tools – Negative Results Certain tools did not show significant differences between Adopters and Non-Adopters, nor were they correlated strongly with other tools:
Activity-Based Costing/Management (ABC/ABM)
Cost tables
Tear down analysis/Reverse engineering
Integrated Data Environment (IDE) was not asked on the survey
No correlation between tools and maturity
13. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 13 Benefits of TC Increased overall profitability
Reduced manufacturing costs
Reduced the costs of new products before manufacturing
Met or exceeded customer expectations for our products
Reduced the cost of purchased materials
Resulted in product features and functions that customers value
Developed a more profitable product mix
Decreased the number of design changes after production begins
Reduced the time required for new product introduction
14. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 14 Adopters cited negative impact of missing targets
Adopters also cited inverse problem of no rewards for achieving targets
Buy-in by top management is crucial:
Lack of top management support
Increased overall profitability [main benefit]
Barriers to Improvement
15. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 15 Survey – Key Results Clear delineation of TC Tools
Convincing evidence of TC Benefits
Unbalanced representation on cross functional teams a problem
Improvement possible in supplier integration, performance measurement, rewards, training, information systems
Handful of significant differences for Aerospace and Defense, “small programs”
16. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 16 Survey – Expected Results Adopters had more demanding business environment, more discriminating customers
Adopters had greater customer and supplier involvement
Adopters estimated costs at both ends of the life cycle more often
Non-Adopters perceived TC as irrelevant, or lacked the resources to implement in light of other initiatives
17. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 17 Survey – “Interesting” Results Adopters had longer cycle times, and reduced cycle time was least often observed benefit
For A&D companies, more important to beat competitor’s price
ABC not a hallmark tool of TC
Adopters weakest in key principles of Price Led Costing, Life Cycle Costing (esp. Disposal)
Bimodal maturity
18. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 18 Target Costing Diagnostic Tool Developed by TC Group under Dave Schwendeman, Gus Blazek, and Pete Zampino
Tool focuses on readiness, capability, maturity
TC should be an inextricable part of the new product development process, so focus not so much on process
Intended to guide implementation strategy and toolbox development
Points out “weak” areas
19. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 19 Diagnostic Tool Mechanics Diagnostic tool divided into three areas:
Cultural/Infrastructure: 5 tenets, reflects corporate environment suitable for Target Costing
Principles: 6 tenets, key principles from TC book
Processes/Tools: 7 tenets, capturing key enablers
Each tenet has several associated true-false statements
Statements are designed to avoid “gaming the question”
Average scores on each part are plotted to form a “spider” graph for each of the three sections
20. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 20 Sample Diagnostic – Fledgling
21. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 21 Sample Diagnostic – World-Class
22. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 22 Diagnostic Tool Development Benefit of multiple perspectives, functional expertise within group
“Zealots” tended to produce overemphasis
99Q3 Seattle, joint meeting with SAVE
“Group English is painful”
Disagreement over grouping of tenets
Inclusion of similar tenets under Principles and another area
Disagreement over scoring of statements
All or nothing vs. numerical scale (e.g., 1-5)
23. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 23 Target Cost Best Practices Implementation Survey (2001) Phase II
24. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 24 TCBP Implementation Survey (2001) German site visits proved infeasible
Purpose: Provide insight into
Breadth of TC applications for a variety of industries
Degree of success and measurable benefits achieved
Characteristics of successful adopters
Researchers:
Dr. Dan Swenson, Arizona State University West
Dr. Il-Woon Kim, University of Akron
Dr. Thomas E. Buttross, Pennsylvania State University - Harrisburg
Statisticians: Cari Pullen, Peter Braxton, Richard Coleman
Project Director: Pete Zampino
Final Report issued March, 2002
25. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 25 TCBP Implementation Survey (2001) 27 Respondents, all “Adopters”
38 multi-part questions
Many “one through five” type (Likert Scale)
Not Important, … , Very Important
Strongly Agree, … , Strongly Disagree
Six sections
Company Information (confidential) [1-11]
Site Information [12-16]
Business Strategy [17-20]
Management Support [21-26]
Enablers/Tools [27-34]
Implementation Results [35-39]
Same statistical tests as references for Phase I survey
26. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 26 Middle Management is Key,So Communication is Needed Many benefits of Target Costing (about a third) aren’t achieved until communication reaches middle management
So, communication must proceed through the chain of command
… the following slides show this graphically
27. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 27 Benefits Correlated with Upper Management
28. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 28 Benefits Correlated with Middle Management
29. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 29 CommunicationsChain of Command
30. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 30 CommunicationsChain of Command Does Middle Management = Program / Project Manager?
May depend on organization
No definition given in survey
Does Upper Middle Management “feed” Upper Management?
Correlation may be bottom-up as well as top-down
Middle Management can serve as “blockers”
Lack of Middle Management support correlates to low benefits
31. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 31 Other Management Results Upper management correlated with
encouraging innovation
empowerment
Middle management correlated with
encouraging innovation
empowerment
continuous improvement mindset
effective team work
Lower Middle management correlated with
high morale
empowerment
continuous improvement mindset
effective team work
Lower management correlated with team members empowerment
32. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 32 Formalized Decision Analysiswith Risk Assessment* Mature and Full Implementers both use formalized decision analysis with risk reduction to a greater extent
Formalized decision analysis with risk assessment is correlated with all benefits
It has much more impact on benefits than any other tool
Other tools/initiatives with some impact include:
Voice of the customer
Continuous improvement (Kaizen)
Concurrent engineering
Life-cycle costing
Not asked on Phase I Survey
33. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 33 Benefits Correlated with Formalized Decision Analysis with Risk Assessment
34. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 34 Other Survey Results Consistent with 1998 Survey:
Bimodal maturity
Reverse Engineering, ABC/M, Cost Tables still little used
Benefits correlated with time (maturity)
Time to market least among benefits
“Interesting” results:
Use of Project Management, Decision Analysis correlated with time (maturity)
Functional group representation correlated with the benefits of TC only with design engineers
35. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 35 Dichotomy – Mature Implementers
36. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 36 Mature Implementers Differences Adoption of TC driven by customer recommendation to a greater extent [18b]
More extensive communication of TC objectives and status/progress [19a,d]
Design engineering groups have a greater representation on the TC team [25b]
Use VOC, decision analysis, and DTC to a greater extent [34c,d,i]
TC considered more successful by design engineering [38b]
Fewer production problems, fewer quality problems, better cost control over internal processes, and more satisfied customers [39c,d,g,k]
37. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 37 Dichotomy – “Full” Implementers
38. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 38 “Full” Implementers Differences Adoption of TC driven by market concerns to a greater extent [18g]
More extensive communication of TC objectives, status/progress, and target costing accomplishments [19a,d,e]
Use executive mandates to achieve TC buy-in more extensively [21b]
More extensive support from middle and middle-upper management [24c,d]
Purchasing and distribution/logistics groups have greater representation on the TC team [25d,h]
TC team members are encouraged to innovate to a greater extent [26c]
39. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 39 “Full” Implementers Differences Rely on new, on-line integrated system more extensively to meet TC data requirements [29d]
Financial cost systems allow cost estimates at various levels to a greater extent [30e]
VOC, decision analysis, and DFMA to a greater extent [34c,d,j]
Satisfied with direct labor costs to a greater extent [35d]
Management used TC results to measure employee performance to a greater extent [37d]
TC considered more successful by service engineering [38c]
Faster time to market and more satisfied customers [39a,k]
40. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 40 Dichotomy – Large Companies
41. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 41 Large Companies Differences TC better aligned with strategic objectives [17]
Adoption of TC driven by product design concerns to a greater extent [18i]
Process and cost information is shared with suppliers to a greater extent [20b,c]
Use grass roots acceptance to achieve TC buy-in to a greater extent [21c]
Management support for financial resources is more extensive [22a]
Accounting/finance groups have greater representation on the TC team [25a]
Use PM, benchmarking, VE, DTC, and ABC to a greater extent [34e,f,h,i,p]
42. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 42 Large Companies Differences Gather relevant data, evaluate decision alternatives, make timely decisions and act upon decisions to a greater extent [36a,c,d,e]
Management used TC results to measure organizational and employee performance, and used team participation in annual performance evaluations to a greater extent [37c,d,g]
TC considered more successful by accounting/ finance [38a]
Faster time to market, better cost control over purchased materials and parts, and improved product/service profitability [39a,f,l]
43. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 43 Dichotomy – “TC” Practitioners
44. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 44 “TC” Practitioners Differences Used TC more predominantly on commercial (non-government products) [14]
Adoption of TC driven by customer recommendation to a greater extent [18b]
Management Support for training and education more extensive [22e]
Management stayed actively involved and responded to feedback to a greater extent [23a,c]
More support and supplier training, but less customer training [27d,e,f]
TC considered more successful by purchasing and product planning [38d,e]
Better cost control over purchased materials and parts [39f]
45. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 45 Items for Future Discussion Value Engineering/Value Analysis
While used a lot, no connection to benefits
Cross Functional Teams (CFTs)
CFTs are incompletely staffed
In-plant-oriented disciplines are fairly well represented
Accounting/Finance - Production Planning
Design Engineering - Operations/Manufacturing
Purchasing
Customer-oriented disciplines are slighted
Service Engineering - Distribution/Logistics
Quality Assurance - Sales/Marketing
We conclude that the tenets of Customer Focus and Life Cycle Orientation are not yet fully entrenched
46. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 46 Diagnostic Tool and Survey For both Phase I and Phase II Surveys, questions were selected that represented each diagnostic tenet, either directly or by affinity
Averages were computed for each tenet on a 1-5 scale
Raw correlations between these averages and an aggregate measure of success were computed
Spearman and Kendall rank correlation tests performed to determine statistical significance
Phase II results shown on next slide
47. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 47 Diagnostic Tool and Survey
48. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 48 Diagnostic Tool Refinements Incorporating Survey Results
49. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 49 Diagnostic Tool Refinements Three new tenets added under Culture / Infrastructure
Communication
Resources
Change Management
Does order matter around the spider chart?
Relative importance / ranking of tenets?
Remove Supplier Partnerships from Tools, combine with Principles – Value Chain
50. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 50 Culture / InfrastructureCommunication Upper Management has communicated their objectives & expectations of the CAIV initiative to all levels of the organization
A formal mandate for action such as command media or policy manual is in place to facilitate the CAIV process
A published plan to convey the CAIV objectives & expectations and engage all participants down the line is in place and being followed
Systems are in place to facilitate the flow of information related to the CAIV process
A non-threat communication plan with suppliers has been developed for data sharing
Documented processes are in place to protect supplier information
A standard metric reporting package is being used by the cross-functional teams to track status to the target in program reviews
51. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 51 Culture / InfrastructureResources An appropriate level of resources has been planned, budgeted, and assigned to the cross-functional teams
A CAIV Lead has been assigned and has timely and unrestricted access to the Program Management
Qualified people have been assigned to support the CAIV process
People have been adequately trained to implement CAIV
Adequate resources have been provided to develop and maintain CAIV core tools and supporting processes
Lead time & staffing levels have been provided to implement CAIV properly
52. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 52 Culture / InfrastructureChange Management A formal organizational readiness assessment / maturity diagnostic has been performed and documented
Corrective actions are taken to meet CAIV objectives
An Executive Steering Committee is in place to oversee change
Upper Management requires progress reports on the CAIV process from their direct reports at all organizational reviews
Active support from Top Functional Managers has been obtained
CAIV has been integrated with other processes & initiatives
53. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 53 Cultural/Infrastructure
54. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 54 Principles
55. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 55 Processes/Tools
56. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 56 Current State of CAIV in DoD Renewed policy mandate
DoD 5000 series
Aldridge memo
Separation of Acquisition and Logistics initiatives
CAIV affinity with Program Management, Systems Engineering, Cost Estimating
TOC affinity with Performance-Based Logistics (PBL), Total Life Cycle Systems Management (TLCSM)
Renewed emphasis on Affordability
Application of Nunn-McCurdy Amendment
57. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 57 USD(AT&L) CAIV Memo 19 Jan 02 Memo from USD(AT&L) E.C. “Pete” Aldridge
Subj: Cost-as-an-Independent Variable (CAIV) and Spiral Development Implementation Plans
dtd 19 Jan 2002
Two plans required by end FY02 for “100% of defense programs
Supports Goal #1 of 5: “Achieve credibility and effectiveness in the acquisition and logistics support process”
Progress reports on 1 Mar and 3 Jun
POC – Dr. Spiros Pallas (PD, S&TS), (703) 695-7417
RTOC Working Group to provide templates by 31 Mar
58. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 58 Next Steps Target Costing Implementation Guide (TCIG)
59. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 59 Implementation Guide Development Target Costing book = rules of baseball
Implementation Guide = how to manage a baseball team
Working outline:
Build Support Base
Establish Charter for Target Costing
Develop Implementation Plan
Build Teams for Target Costing
Provide Training
Acquire Tools
Develop Action Plan to Achieve Goals
Institutionalize the Target Costing Process
60. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 60 IG Development Process Outline drafted by working group chair
Outline developed, supporting materials brainstormed at 01Q4
Core materials and outline posted to QuickPlace
Secure customizable project website
Supporting materials and text posted by group members
Outline refined 02Q1
Interim meetings of chair, academic team, and lead authors
61. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 61 Program Management Community of Practice (PM CoP) – http://www.pmcop.dau.mil
Total Ownership Cost (TOC) CoP
Multi-disciplinary CoP focused on issues surrounding TOC and Reduction of TOC
Including CAIV (Target Costing), ABC/M, EVM, Cost Estimating
Navy ARO POCs – (703) 602-2300
Rob Houser – RHouser@ar.navy.mil – x149
Peter Braxton – PBraxton@ar.navy.mil – x162
Also CoPs for Risk Management,Systems Engineering, and Contract Management
Interest areas for Software, PBL, HSI, ESOH A Word From Our Sponsor…
62. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 62 CAIV Diagnostic Tool (CDT) Guiding implementation
63. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 63 Cultural/InfrastructureLeadership Embracing CAIV adherence is a factor in executive management performance
Executive managers evaluate project managers based on their use of CAIV tenets
All management levels embrace the strategic philosophy of CAIV
Those who don't support the philosophy are removed or reassigned
Management demonstrates its commitment to the process by providing resources, facilities, etc
A high level multifunctional core organization is established to integrate all processes
64. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 64 Cultural/InfrastructurePerformance Metrics Performance metrics encourage CAIV
Compensation and benefits are linked to performance metrics
Risk taking and innovation, essential to CAIV, are included in performance metrics
Metrics are in place to encourage and enable team, as well as program, target achievement
Cross-functional teams have substantial input in individuals' career path
65. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 65 Cultural/InfrastructureEmpowerment and Innovation Individuals and teams make all decisions within contractually defined boundaries
Processes exist for individuals and teams to pursue innovative ideas
The team environment encourages decision making
Roles and responsibilities of management and teams are clearly understood and documented
Decisions are made at the lowest appropriate level
66. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 66 Cultural/InfrastructureProject Management Cost, schedule, and “product” are related and managed interdependently
All scope is documented and linked to customer expectations
Scope is formally defined in a work breakdown structure
Product metrics are meaningful, timely, and deployed utilizing a structured methodology
There is a functioning risk management process in place
Project management has a life cycle orientation
Project management has formal job descriptions and compensation rules and is perceived as a career path
67. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 67 Cultural/InfrastructureTraining Training cultivates knowledge, ability, awareness and behavior
Training is not a discipline unto itself; both thinkers and doers are engaged as trainers
Regular participation in training, as trainer or trainee, is required of all members of the enterprise
The quality of training is evaluated by trainers, trainees and project managers
Courses of training constantly evolve based on trainers’, trainees’, and consumers’ requirements
Training encompasses the full spectrum of teaming, functional area disciplines, and CAIV tools
68. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 68 PrinciplesCustomer Focus Tools and processes are in place to incorporate customer requirements for quality, cost and time, and are used for appropriate product/process decisions
A systematic method for capturing and ranking customer “value” based requirements is in place and used by you, your suppliers, and customers
The customer is an interactive part of the design activity and accessible on a daily basis
Reaching the cost target requires the voice of the customer for changes in functionality or quality
Product feature and function enhancements only take place if they meet customer expectations and customers are willing to pay for them
69. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 69 PrinciplesLife Cycle Cost Reduction Decisions are made based on ownership costs over the product life including purchasing price, operating costs, maintenance and repair, and disposition costs
A system is in place to recognize the correct valuation of life cycle costs
Suppliers recognize their role in life cycle cost contributions
There is a common understanding of the definition of life cycle cost at the enterprise (product) level
70. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 70 PrinciplesPrice-Led Costing Cost targets flow from a rigorous affordability determination process
Analysis of Alternatives (AoA) is rigorously documented and applied to establishing thresholds and objectives
The relationship between product feature and function and product cost is communicated to affected stakeholders in the value chain
Programs are not launched unless it has been demonstrated that affordability constraints will be satisfied
Resources are available to those products that meet cost and performance targets
71. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 71 PrinciplesFocus on Design Product features and cost targets are set during product planning and concept development stages
Systematic methods are used to achieve target costs during the design development and production stages
Designs are reviewed by stakeholders prior to release to reduce unwanted post design change activity
Products and manufacturing processes are simultaneously engineered
72. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 72 PrinciplesValue Chain Involvement Producers, suppliers, and service providers are involved in value determinations
Product decisions are influenced by supplier and service provider requirement inputs
Operations and Support (O&S) needs are involved in value determinations
Voice of the customer is heard throughout the value chain
73. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 73 PrinciplesCross Functional Teams [1] Product- and process- focused teams (i.e. cross functional teams) are utilized and include all stakeholders (e.g., design, manufacturing engineers, production, sales, marketing, material, finance, services and support)
Team responsibility encompasses the product life cycle
Suppliers, distributors, customers, and recyclers are directly involved in cross functional teams
Cross functional teams have the responsibility, accountability and authority for all product work statement decisions
74. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 74 PrinciplesCross Functional Teams [2] Stakeholders have responsibility, accountability and authority to represent and commit for their function
The cross functional team has internal staffing authority
The cross functional team leadership has performance evaluation input on all team members
The cross functional team members are primarily evaluated by how they support overall product strategy, and secondarily by their functional organization strategy
The roles and responsibilities of all team members are clearly defined and available
75. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 75 Processes/ToolsProduct-Focused Financial Systems Financial systems are designed to allow estimation of costs at the parts level, major assembly level, and product feature or function
Financial systems are an integrated part of product development
Financial systems are used for past reporting, future planning, benchmarking of potentials, and identifying opportunities
Financial data systems are flexible, timely, and the access mechanisms are invisible to the user
Business plans and resource requirements are based on the mission-driven detail statement of work
76. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 76 Processes/ToolsValue Engineering/Value Analysis Feature and function decisions are tied directly to customer value expectations
A corps of experts in value engineering principles and methodology is involved in the team
Value decisions are based on total life cycle cost
Value decisions are supported by part cost detail and integration cost detail
The Value Methodology is employed throughout the value chain
77. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 77 Processes/ToolsVoice of the Customer There is a rigorous tool for identifying and ranking product and process design characteristics based on customer requirements (e.g., QFD)
Customer input is sought during the product design phase
Customer and product data is collected using formal methods (e.g., surveys, focus groups, clinics, etc.)
Customer needs analysis data is routinely disseminated throughout the organization
78. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 78 Processes/ToolsDecision Analysis Formal decision support tools or processes are used in the formulation of program plans
Business case analysis is used for product and process decisions
Decision tools address the following six investment elements: cost, schedule, performance, effectiveness/value, risk, and profit
Decision analysis tools complement other target costing tools and processes (e.g., Value Engineering, Quality Function Deployment, etc)
Decision making is information based
79. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 79 Processes/ToolsBenchmarking/Cost Driver Analysis Cost information categorized by part attributes and organized by part/process families is utilized
Cost information is calibrated to regional performance and industrial engineering standards
Cost information is readily accessible and easy to understand
Cost information is utilized in conjunction with component actuals to identify opportunities
Cost information guides the Design/Build effort
80. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 80 Processes/ToolsProduct Estimating Program lessons learned are folded into estimate tools and processes
Estimating routines and manufacturing rules of thumb are integrated into design tools
Program and component estimates are consistent with design and manufacturing schedules
Appropriate tools to provide cost insight are used to make decisions during product definition and production
Cost estimates delineate between cost risk and the core cost estimate
81. PBraxton@ar.navy.mil (703) 633-8300 x4327 81 Processes/ToolsSupplier Partnerships Suppliers share in cost reduction opportunities and benefits
Suppliers are involved in design and build decisions
Partnerships maintain supplier profit margins
Suppliers and producers have common measures of customer satisfaction and long term success
Cooperation, performance to commitment, and communication are fundamental to the supplier-producer relationship