Module4 - PRODUCT AND SERVICE DESIGN
Module4 - PRODUCT AND SERVICE DESIGN
LECTURE NOTES
• Translate customer wants and needs into product and service requirements. (marketing, operations)
• Refine existing products and services. (marketing)
• Develop new products and/or services. (marketing, operations)
• Formulate quality goals. (marketing, operations)
• Formulate cost targets. (accounting, finance, operations)
• Construct and test prototypes. (operations, marketing, engineering)
• Document specifications.
• Translate product and service specifications into process specifications. (engineering, operations)
• Economic (e.g., low demand, excessive warranty claims, the need to reduce costs).
• Social and demographic (e.g., aging baby boomers, population shifts).
• Political, liability, or legal (e.g., government changes, safety issues, new regulations).
• Competitive (e.g., new or changed products or services, new advertising/promotions).
• Cost or availability (e.g., of raw materials, components, labor, water, energy).
• Technological (e.g., in product components, processes).
IDEA GENERATION
• Customer inputs:
o Surveys
o Focus groups
o Complaints
o Unsolicited suggestions for improvement
• One of the strongest motivators for new and improved products or services is competitors’ products and
services.
• Reverse Engineering - companies purchase a competitor’s product and then carefully dismantle and
inspect it, searching for ways to improve their own product.
o Reverse engineering can enable a company to leapfrog the competition by developing an even
better product.
o The Ford Motor Company used this tactic in developing its highly successful Taurus model.
• Research and Development - refers to organized efforts that are directed toward increasing scientific
knowledge and product or process innovation.
o Involves the following:
▪ Basic research - has the objective of advancing the state of knowledge about a subject,
without any near-term expectation of commercial applications.
▪ Applied research has the objective of achieving commercial applications.
▪ Development converts the results of applied research into useful commercial applications.
o The first organization to bring a new product or service to the market generally stands to profit
from it before the others can catch up.
o Early products may be priced higher because a temporary monopoly exists until competitors bring
their versions out.
o The costs of R&D can be high, but the benefits to be gained sometimes outweighs the cost.
LEGAL AND ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
• Product Liability - the responsibility of a manufacturer for any injuries or damages caused by a faulty
product because of poor workmanship or design.
• Ethical issues often arise in the design of products and services; it is important for managers to be aware of
these issues and for designers to adhere to ethical standards.
• Guidelines for Product Designers:
o Produce designs that are consistent with the goals of the organization.
o Give customers the value they expect.
o Make health and safety a primary concern.
HUMAN FACTORS
CULTURAL FACTORS
• Cultural differences of different countries should be considered by product designers of companies that
operate globally.
DEGREE OF STANDARDIZATION
• Standardization - refers to the extent to which there is absence of variety in a product, service, or process.
o Usually involves large quantities of identical items.
o Immediately available to customers.
o They have interchangeable parts, which contributes to lower production costs, higher productivity
and making replacement or repair.
o The disadvantage of standardization is that there is a lack of variety, which limits the range of
customers.
DESIGNING FOR MASS CUSTOMIZATION
• Companies like standardization because it enables them to produce high volumes of low-cost products.
• Customers, however, typically prefer more variety, although they like the low cost.
• Mass Customization - a strategy of producing standardized goods or services, but incorporating some
degree of customization in the final product or service.
• Tactics for Mass Customization
o Delayed Differentiation
▪ A postponement tactic: the process of producing, but not quite completing, a product or
service, postponing completion until customer preferences or specifications are known.
▪ Almost-finished units might be held in inventory until customer orders are received, at which
time customized features are incorporated.
▪ The result of delayed differentiation is a product or service with customized features that can
be quickly produced, appealing to the customers’ desire for variety and speed of delivery, and
yet one that for the most part is standardized, enabling the producer to realize the benefits of
standardized production.
o Modular Design
▪ Modules represent groupings of component parts into subassemblies, usually to the point
where the individual parts lose their separate identity.
▪ For mass customization, modular design enables producers to quickly assemble products
with modules to achieve a customized configuration for an individual customer, avoiding the
long customer wait that would occur if individual parts had to be assembled.
▪ Advantages:
• Failures are often easier to diagnose and remedy because there are fewer pieces to
investigate.
• There is ease of repair and replacement.
▪ Disadvantages:
• The number of possible configurations of modules is much less than the number of
possible configurations based on individual components.
• The inability to disassemble a module in order to replace a faulty part; the entire
module must be scrapped—usually at a higher cost.
RELIABILITY
• It is a measure of the ability of a product, a part, a service, or an entire system to perform its intended function
under a prescribed set of conditions.
• It is used in comparing alternatives by buyers, and by sellers, as a determinant of the price.
• The higher the reliability of a product, the fewer the resources that will be needed to maintain it, and the less
frequently it will involve the three Rs.
• Failure - used to describe a situation in which an item does not perform as intended.
• Normal Operating Conditions - can include load, temperature, and humidity ranges as well as operating
procedures and maintenance schedules. Failure of users to heed these conditions often results in premature
failure of parts or complete systems.
• Improving Reliability:
o Improve component design.
o Improve production and/or assembly techniques.
o Improve testing.
o Use backups.
o Improve preventive maintenance procedures.
o Improve user education.
o Improve system design.
ROBUST DESIGN
• It is a structured approach for integrating the “voice of the customer” into both the product and service
development process.
• The purpose is to ensure that customer requirements are factored into every aspect of the process.
• The structure of QFD is based on a set of matrices.
o Main matrix relates customer requirements (what) and their corresponding technical requirements
(how).
o Additional features are usually added to the basic matrix to broaden the scope of analysis.
o A correlational matrix is usually constructed for technical requirements; this can reveal conflicting
technical requirements.
THE KANO MODEL
• A theory of product and service design developed by Dr. Noriaki Kano, a Japanese professor, who offered a
perspective on customer perceptions of quality different from the traditional view that “more is better.”
• Proposed different categories of quality and posited that understanding them would better position
designers to assess and address quality needs.
• It provides insights into the attributes that are perceived to be important to customers, and employs three
definitions of quality:
o Basic quality - refers to customer requirements that have only a limited effect on customer
satisfaction if present, but lead to dissatisfaction if not present.
o Performance quality - refers to customer requirements that generate satisfaction or dissatisfaction
in proportion to their level of functionality and appeal.
o Excitement quality - refers to a feature or attribute that was unexpected by the customer and causes
excitement (the “wow” factor)
o The Kano model can be used in conjunction with QFD as well as in six sigma projects
PHASES IN PRODUCT DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT
• Feasibility analysis. Feasibility analysis entails market analysis (demand), economic analysis (development
cost and production cost, profit potential), and technical analysis (capacity requirements and availability,
and the skills needed).
• Product specifications. This involves detailed descriptions of what is needed to meet (or exceed) customer
wants, and requires collaboration between legal, marketing, and operations.
• Process specifications. Once product specifications have been set, attention turns to specifications for the
process that will be needed to produce the product.
• Prototype development. With product and process specifications complete, one (or a few) units are made
to see if there are any problems with the product or process specifications.
• Design review. At this stage, any necessary changes are made or the project is abandoned.
• Market test. A market test is used to determine the extent of consumer acceptance.
• Product introduction. The new product is promoted. This phase is handled by marketing.
• Follow-up evaluation. Based on user feedback, changes may be made or forecasts refined. This phase is
handled by marketing.
• Service design begins with the choice of a service strategy, which determines the nature and focus of the
service, and the target market.
• Key Issues In Service Design
o Degree of variation in service requirements
o Degree of customer contact and customer involvement in the delivery system.
• Phases in Service Design Process
o Conceptualize.
▪ Idea generation
▪ Assessment of customer wants/needs (marketing)
▪ Assessment of demand potential (marketing)
o Identify service package components needed (operations and marketing).
o Determine performance specifications (operations and marketing).
o Translate performance specifications into design specifications.
o Translate design specifications into delivery specifications.
• Characteristics of a Well-Designed Service System
o Being consistent with the organization mission.
o Being user-friendly.
o Being robust if variability is a factor.
o Being easy to sustain.
o Being cost-effective.
o Having value that is obvious to customers.
o Having effective linkages between back-of-the-house operations and front-of-the-house operations.
o Having a single, unifying theme, such as convenience or speed.
o Having design features and checks that will ensure service that is reliable and of high quality.
• Guidelines for Successful Service Design
o Define the service package in detail.
o Focus on the operation from the customer’s perspective.
o Consider the image that the service package will present both to customers and prospective
customers.
o Recognize that designers’ familiarity with the system may give them a quite different perspective
than that of the customer, and take steps to overcome this.
o Make sure that managers are involved and will support the design once it is implemented.
o Define quality for both tangibles and intangibles. Intangible standards are more difficult to define,
but they must be addressed.
o Make sure that recruitment, training, and reward policies are consistent with service expectations.
o Establish procedures to handle both predictable and unpredictable events.
o Establish systems to monitor, maintain, and improve service.