Week 01 Technology Development
Week 01 Technology Development
Week 1
Developing Technology in a
Concurrent Engineering Context
Technology Roadmaps
Motorola has published how they define &
deploy Technology Road Maps
There are 2 types of Road Maps
- Emerging Technology Road Maps
- Product Technology Road Maps
Emerging Technology
Road Maps
Technology that is considered new & not yet
commercialized
This technology exists in a lab somewhere
Its commercial application is 3-8 years away
Prepared & up dated by a small committee of
technical experts
Used to evaluate internal capabilities, comparison
with competitors present & future capabilities &
to forecast the progression of the technologies.
Knowledge of Competition
2. Technology Forecast to
Focus R&D Investments
Technology forecasts are constructed from
patent literature, published research papers,
patent disclosures, public forums &
seminars, competitive technology
assessments, etc. etc.
Forecasts are documented through the
creation of Technology Trend Charts
Documents feasible technological activities
(...but obviously not inventive surprises!!!)
4. Quality
An evaluation of the impact new technologies will
have on the businesses quality goals...
- e.g. robustness, reliability, functional capability
(Cp & Cpk), service & maintainability
5. Allocation of Technology
Development Resources
Structured & Disciplined Planning for technology
development - just as one does for product
development & mfg./production
Use of Project Management Best Practices
- work breakdown structures & flow
- critical path identification & management
- projectized organizational structures
- Integrated Project Plans across the org.
6. Patent Portfolio
Develop patentable technology that is highly
produceable/manufacturable
(avoid design for patentability)
Primary focus: creating revenue bearing patents
Secondary focus: creating patents that are licensed
or traded
List of Patent Disclosures
Competitive assessment of patent activities in your
strategic areas
7. Product Descriptions,
Summary Reports & Charts
Produced for each product in your portfolio
- in an updateable format
Contents:
- project name
- project manager
- project objective
- key personnel
- actual vs. planned budget
- actual vs. planned staffing
- product idea document
8. Minority Reports
Provision for the creation of a minority
point of view that can provide
management awareness of a valuable
product or process technology that is worth
investigating.
Help for technology ideas that fell through
the cracks or lack an articulate advocate or
champion.
- Unit-to-Unit
- Deterioration
Deployment of Technology
Roadmaps & the VOC
Taking disciplined action based on the Road Map
Data - technology plans come after & are
dependent on product family plans
Recognition that business strategies, customer
needs & technology development must be
integrated
Technology development process has deliverables
that are able to be assessed wrt business &
customer requirements (giving R&D a Context!!!)
Inherent/Generic Robustness
of Technology
Inherent Robustness: technologies (parameters
& functions) that are by their nature insensitive to
sources of variability that are associated with their
commercialization environment (mfg. & use)
Conceptual Robustness: technology concepts
that possess either inherent robustness or a
capacity to be made robust with relative ease (e.g.
additive physics & measurable fundamental
functions)
Inherent/Generic Robustness
of Technology
Generic Noise Factors: General sources of
variability that stimulate variation within the
functional responses (dependent variables)
associated with a set of candidate technological
building blocks (independent control parameters)
- general implies the type of noises that exist
across the mfg., supply chain & customer use
environments for the entire family of products the
technology is intended to serve
Inherent/Generic Robustness
of Technology
Technology Subsystem Robustness: an aggregation of
technological building blocks (controllable parameters)
that possess set points that leave the measured function of
the subsystem minimally sensitive to a generic set of noise
factors
Technology System Robustness: a system of integrated,
robust subsystem technologies that has been balanced
across subsystem functions in the presence of system level
noise factors
This system is commonly called a Platform - if it can be
used to support the commercialization of a family of
products
Tuneability by Design
Dynamic Technology is either a subsystem or
system that is capable of being adjusted or tuned
to new application functions in the continuum of
planned product family requirements
Dynamic Technology is designed to be adjustable
Dynamic Technology is based on stable, well
documented physical principles that describe a
function that is active over a stable continuum that
is traceable to the VOC & the Technology Road
map
Static Technology
The term Static refers to technology that has been
developed to hit a specific target value
- little thought given to future tuning or adjusting
requirements (poor family planning)
- experimentation is temporally structured to
hit a target&, if time permits, focus is shifted on
reducing variability about that specific target
- classic research mentality where technological work is
linked to patents - not Platforms or Product Families
Dynamic Technology
The term Dynamic refers to technology that has
been developed to hit a range of target values
- significant thought is dedicated to the creation of future
adjustability to meet family product plans
- experimentation is temporally structured to
generate a tunable function& to simultaneously focus
on reducing variability about a range of targets
- modern research mentality where technological work is
linked to patentable technology that yields Platforms &
rapidly commercializable Product Families
Platformability
Platforms allow a business to plan
efficiently for short & long term product
line strategies
Platforms are built on dynamic technology
that is matched to the nature of the Business
Dynamics (noises) & VOC requirements
that are inherent in the market segments
targeted by the Product Family Plan
Product Families
Families of products allow businesses to capture
revenues efficiently within the market segments
they choose to serve
Efficiency comes from re-use of robust & tunable
technologies as the product line is systematically
commercialized over time
Commercialization Cycle-time is greatly reduced
when technology does not have to be re-developed
every time a new product is developed
(much preferred over parallel tech./prod. dev. paths)
Technology Development
Process
Phase 2:
Generate Concepts to fulfill Functions.
Model Parametric Relationships &
Select Superior Concepts
Phase 3:
Transform Superior Concepts into
Robust & Tuneable Designs using
Generic Noise Factors
Phase 4:
Integrate Robust & Tuneable Designs
into Balanced Platforms that are safe to
transfer into Product Commercialization
The
Impermeable
Membrane
Product Development
Process
Discussion Points
1. How would your company develop a technology road map with
regard to product and manufacturing technology?
2. What impact does technology development have on your
companys ability to get products to the market?
3. Are the lines of communication open & active between your
business strategists, in-bound market, product planning and
technology development personnel?
4. Do they have an integrated product family plan?
5. What is your role in technology development in your company or
career?
Structured Technology
Development
What is a Phase?
What is a Gate?
Flexibility & Overlap between Phases &
Gates
Managerial Discipline in the Context of
Technology Performance Facts, Capability
& Capacity Limits
What is a Phase?
A Phase is a structured period of time in which to
complete specific deliverables
Used to plan, define, facilitate, conduct & constrain
appropriate development activities
Deliverables are accomplished through Best Practices that
enable the workforce to efficiently work in a team context
to achieve their goals
Phases are organized & constrained by the overarching
Technology Development Process & its deliverables
What is a Gate?
Provides discipline in phase transitions and risk
management
Transitions where technical knowledge is reviewed &
aligned with business plans, budgets & product line
strategies.
Management reviews the facts & aids efficient progression
into the next phase (or stops dev.)
Goal is to assure safe & maturing technology is integrated
with VOC & product family strategy
Gate Stakeholders
Peer Reviews
Peer Reviews should be done at the
beginning & end of each Phase
Collaboration & Communication between
Basic Research Teams, Technology
Development Teams (Prod. & Mfg.) &
Product Commercialization Teams
Safe Technology
Technology that has been developed from
known laws of physics that have been
identified, understood, modeled & proven to
induce stable, well behaved, measurable &
repeatable performance.
Interactions (co-dependencies between
control factors that effect the response) are
defined & engineered for harmony &
additivity wrt measured functional response.
Mature Technology
Safe technology that has additionally been
made Robust (insensitive) to a generic set of
noise factors that are inherent to the ensuing
product family.
Robust Technology that as been
intentionally developed to be Tunable so it
can support product family functional
ranges.
6 Sigma Quality in
Technology Development
Three major issues
1. Generate specifications required for
functional performance
2. Identification of Critical Functional
Responses that fulfill the specified
performance in subsystem technologies
3. Measurement of Critical functional
Responses (Means & Std. Deviations)
Specify Required
Functional Performance
Determine the target values & range of applications
for the candidate technologies
Develop upper & lower performance specifications
for each target across the tune-able range defined
by the family product plan
Capability
Identification of Critical
Functional Responses (CFRs)
Identify the measurable responses associated with
the fundamental physical actions, transformations
& flows of energy, material & information within
and between each subsystem within a platform
USL & LSL are the Voice Of the Customer based
limits (tolerances) of the measured response
s is the Voice Of the Process as measured in
terms of a sample std. dev. of the CFRs
The 4 Phases of
Technology Development
TD1: Invention, Investigation & Innovation, & Phenomenological
Research Linked to Product portfolio strategy
TD2: Definition, Stabilization & Additivity of Functional
Parameters
TD3: Robustness of Subsystem Functions
TD4. Integration & Transfer of Robust & Tunable Platforms
Technology Development
Phase 1
Align VOC wrt to Business Strategies & Technology Translate
VOC into Technology Houses of Quality
Invention (creation of technologies)
Phenomenological Research Linked to Product portfolio Strategy
Broad Investigation, Tech. Benchmarking & Innovation (R&D of
existing technologies)
Conduct Technology Concept Generation
Quantify the Investment Opportunities (NPV)
VOC-voice of the customer, NPV-net present value
Phase 1 Deliverables
Technology Road Maps
- Documented VOC & Business
requirements to drive technology dev.
- Benchmarking Reports
Invention Portfolio (existing)
Re-Use & Leveraging Portfolio (internal/external)
Technology Houses of Quality
(Technology Requirements Documents)
Technology Concepts (Subsystems & Platforms)
Technology Development
Phase 2
Phase 2 Deliverables
Full Portfolio of Technology Concepts Documented...
General Analytical & Empirical Models:
(Parametric Equations including interactions)
Additivity Analysis:(independence of parameter main effects to
function
Commercialization Analysis Report: (design for X issues
documented for feasibility & cost)
Superior Concepts Documented
Critical Parameters & Functional Responses (incl. metrology
systems) Documented
Technology Development
Phase 3
Robustness of Subsystem Functions...
- Failure Mode & Effects Analysis
- Generic Noise Diagramming
- Dynamic Robustness Optimization
- Optimize Ideal Function
- Stress Testing
- Critical Parameter Sensitivity Analysis
- Technology Refinement
FMEA-failure modes, effects and analysis, FTA-fault tree analysis, Ishikawa a.k.a. fishbone
Phase 3 Deliverables
Engineering Analysis Report:
Technology Development
Phase 4
Development & Transfer of Robust &
Tuneable Platforms...
Integration & Evaluation of Robust &
Tuneable Subsystems
Balancing System Performance in the
presence of generic stressful noises
Transfer of Robust & Tuneable Platforms
Phase 4 Deliverables
Patent Documentation
Commercialization Cost & Personnel Estimates
Platform & Subsystem Critical Parameter
Drawings & Specifications
Risk Assessment
Key Supply Chain Elements
Regulatory, Safety & Environment Assessment
Technology Transfer
Safe & Mature Technology moved to product
development Team
Appropriate Personnel move with technology
Knowledge is documented & transferred
Data are summarized & transferred
Hardware/Electronics/Software is transferred
Instrumentation/Metrology Systems
Discussion Points
How does your company apply phases & gates to
technology development?
What is your opinion of this structured approach to a
typically loosely controlled process?
What are the downsides of practicing technology
development in this way, e.g platforms/tunable tech.?