Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development
This step-by-step, hands-on guide explains how to reduce time to market for new products and effectively meet customer's needs. Demonstrates how to take advantage of the latest development tools and product design, use such proven techniques as robust design and QFD and assess and select the appropriate combination of tools, methodologies and strategies.
1111764766
Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development
This step-by-step, hands-on guide explains how to reduce time to market for new products and effectively meet customer's needs. Demonstrates how to take advantage of the latest development tools and product design, use such proven techniques as robust design and QFD and assess and select the appropriate combination of tools, methodologies and strategies.
50.0 In Stock
Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development

Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development

by Craig Erhorn, John Stark
Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development

Competing by Design: Creating Value and Market Advantage in New Product Development

by Craig Erhorn, John Stark

Hardcover(Revised ed.)

$50.00 
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Overview

This step-by-step, hands-on guide explains how to reduce time to market for new products and effectively meet customer's needs. Demonstrates how to take advantage of the latest development tools and product design, use such proven techniques as robust design and QFD and assess and select the appropriate combination of tools, methodologies and strategies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780471132165
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 05/23/1995
Edition description: Revised ed.
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 6.26(w) x 9.29(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

About the Authors CRAIG ERHORN is a consultant working for themanagement consulting division of "big six" accounting firm Coopers& Lybrand in New York. He has more than twenty years'experience designing, implementing, and using manufacturing andengineering systems in a broad range of industries. He has assisteda number of former employers and clients with improvement andmanagement of their product development process, and has hands-onexperience developing and introducing new products in manufacturingindustries. Craig holds a B.A. degree from Ohio WesleyanUniversity, and an M.B.A. from the University of Connecticut. Hehas held management positions in manufacturing operations andinformation systems prior to becoming a consultant, and wasresponsible for controlling introduction of new products intomanufacturing as well as working on new product development teams.Mr. Erhorn is a member of the American Production and InventoryControl Society (APICS) and is the author of a number of articlesand book chapters dealing with manufacturing systems. JOHN STARK isan independent management consultant based in Geneva, Switzerland.He has helped leading engineering and manufacturing companies inEurope, North America, and the Far East gain competitive advantageby improving product development performance. John holds B.Sc. andPh.D. degrees from Imperial College, London, England. He has workedin engineering and manufacturing environments for more than twentyyears. Dr. Stark is a member of the Institute of Directors (UK),AIAA, CASA/SME, and SAE (U.S.), and the Swiss Computer GraphicsAssociation. He is also the author of a number of previouspublications dealing with the use of CAD and EDM, and theimprovement of engineering productivity. He is the editor of the"Engineering, Data Management Newsletter" and the "EffectiveEngineering Management Newsletter."

Table of Contents

Don't Worry: You're Not so Different.

The Link to Business Strategy.

Design Interfaces with Other Company Functions.

Today's Product Development Process.

The Future Product Development Process.

The Evolution of Product Development.

New Techniques and Technologies.

Defining the Improvement Strategy for Product Development: FromVision to Plan.

Improvement Requirements.

The Process of Implementing Tools and Techniques.

Key Issues for Implementing Improvements.

New Approaches to Engineering: The Techniques.

The Technologies.

The Importance of Engineering Information.

Conclusion.

Index.
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