Concept Generation
Teaching materials to accompany: Product Design and Development Chapter 7 Karl T. Ulrich and Steven D. Eppinger 5th Edition, Irwin McGraw-Hill, 2012.
Product Design and Development
Karl T. Ulrich and Steven D. Eppinger 5th edition, Irwin McGraw-Hill, 2012.
Chapter Table of Contents: 1. Introduction 2. Development Processes and Organizations 3. Opportunity Identification 4. Product Planning 5. Identifying Customer Needs 6. Product Specifications 7. Concept Generation 8. Concept Selection 9. Concept Testing 10. Product Architecture 11. Industrial Design 12. Design for Environment 13. Design for Manufacturing 14. Prototyping 15. Robust Design 16. Patents and Intellectual Property 17. Product Development Economics 18. Managing Projects
Concept Development Process
Mission Statement
Identify Customer Needs
Establish Target Specifications
Generate Product Concepts
Select Product Concept(s)
Test Product Concept(s)
Set Final Specifications
Plan Downstream Development
Development Plan
Perform Economic Analysis Benchmark Competitive Products Build and Test Models and Prototypes
Outline
1. Product concept, definition 2. Commonly dysfunctions in product development 3. Five steps in the product concept generation process
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Product concept
A technical description of how the product will satisfy the customers needs An approximate description of
the technology, working principles, and form of the product
Often expressed with a sketch or 3D model, accompanied with a brief textual description.
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Common dysfunctions during concept generation
Consider only one or two alternatives Fail to consider the usefulness of the concepts Involve only one or two people in the process Ineffectively integrate promising partial solutions Fail to consider entire categories of solutions
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Product Concept Generation Process (5 steps)
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Clarify the problem Search externally Search internally Explore systematically Reflect on the solutions and the process.
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Concept Generation Process
Clarify the Problem
Problem Decomposition
External Search
Lead Users Experts Patents Literature Benchmarking
Internal Search
Individual Methods Group Methods
Systematic Exploration
Classification Tree Combination Table
Reflect on the Process
Continuous 12/11/2013 Improvement
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Clarify the Problem
Understand the problem
From the teams (product) mission statement From the customers needs From the product specifications
Decompose the problem into simpler sub-problems
Divide and conquer Using function diagrams Decompose by sequence of user actions Decompose by key customers need
Focus initial efforts on the critical sub-problems
Focus on critical sub-problems Defer solutions to other sub-problems
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Concept Generation Example: Power Nailer
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Understand the Problem
From mission statement
It will use nails It will be compatible with nail magazines It will nail through roofing singles into wood It will be hand held
Based on assumptions
It inserts nails in rapid succession It is light weight. It has no nailing delays (from the users view)
From specifications
Nail length ranges from 25-28 mm Nailing rate is 1 nail per second. Tool mass is less than 4 KG.
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Problem Decomposition:
Function Diagram
INPUT Energy (?) Material (nails) Signal (tool "trip ") Hand-held naile r OUTPUT Energy (?) Material (driven nail) Signal (? )
Energy
Store or accept external energy
Convert energy to translational energy Apply translational energy to nail
Nails
Store nails
Isolate nail
Driven nail
"Trip " of tool
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Sense trip
Trigger tool
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Search Externally
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Interview lead users Consult experts Search patents Search published literature Benchmark related products
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External Search:
Hints for Finding Related Solutions
Lead Users
benefit from improvement innovation source
Benchmarking
competitive products
Experts
technical experts experienced customers
Patents
search related inventions
Literature
technical journals trade literature
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Search Internally (both group and individually)
Guide for the search
Suspend judgment Generate a lot of ideas Welcome ideas that seem infeasible Use graphic and physical media
Make analogies Wish and wonder User related stimuli Set quantitative goals Post ideas on the wall
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Hints for generating concepts
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Internal Search:
Hints for Generating Many Concepts
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Suspend judgment Generate a lot of ideas Infeasible ideas are welcome Use graphical and physical media Make analogies Wish and wonder Solve the conflict Use related stimuli Use unrelated stimuli Set quantitative goals Use the gallery method Trade ideas in a group
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Explore Systematically
Concept combination tree
Page 132 Prune less promising branches Identify independent approaches to the problem Expose inappropriate emphasis on certain branches Refine the problem decomposition for a particular branch.
Concept combination table
Page 113
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Systematic Exploration:
Concept Combination Table
Convert Electrical Energy to Translational Energy rotary motor w/ transmission Accumulate Energy Apply Translational Energy to Nail single impact
spring
linear motor
moving mass
multiple impacts
solenoid
push nail
rail gun
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Concept Generation Example: Power Nailer
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Reflect on the Results
The solution space? Alternative function diagrams? Alternative ways to decompose the problem? Additional external resources? All ideas generated and integrated?
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Concept Generation Exercise: Vegetable Peelers
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Vegetable Peeler Exercise: Voice of the Customer
"Carrots and potatoes are very different." "I cut myself with this one." "I just leave the skin on." "I'm left-handed. I use a knife." "This one is fast, but it takes a lot off." "How do you peel a squash?" "Here's a rusty one." "This looked OK in the store."
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Vegetable Peeler Exercise: Key Customer Needs
1. The peeler peels a variety of produce. 2. The peeler can be used ambidextrously. 3. The peeler creates minimal waste. 4. The peeler saves time. 5. The peeler is durable. 6. The peeler is easy to clean. 7. The peeler is safe to use and store. 8. The peeler is comfortable to use. 9. The peeler stays sharp or can be easily sharpened.
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Capture Innovation from Lead Users: Utility Light Example
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Capture Innovation from Lead Users: Utility Light Example
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Other Images
Concept Generation Example: Power Nailer
Concept Generation Process
Clarify the Problem
Problem Decomposition
External Search
Lead Users Experts Patents Literature Benchmarking
Internal Search
Individual Methods Group Methods
Systematic Exploration
Classification Tree Combination Table
Reflect on the Process
Continuous Improvement
Concept Generation Exercise: Vegetable Peelers
Vegetable Peeler Exercise: Voice of the Customer
"Carrots and potatoes are very different." "I cut myself with this one." "I just leave the skin on." "I'm left-handed. I use a knife." "This one is fast, but it takes a lot off." "How do you peel a squash?" "Here's a rusty one." "This looked OK in the store."
Vegetable Peeler Exercise: Key Customer Needs
1. The peeler peels a variety of produce. 2. The peeler can be used ambidextrously. 3. The peeler creates minimal waste. 4. The peeler saves time. 5. The peeler is durable. 6. The peeler is easy to clean. 7. The peeler is safe to use and store. 8. The peeler is comfortable to use. 9. The peeler stays sharp or can be easily sharpened.
Problem Decomposition:
Function Diagram
External Search:
Hints for Finding Related Solutions
Lead Users
benefit from improvement innovation source
Benchmarking
competitive products
Experts
technical experts experienced customers
Patents
search related inventions
Literature
technical journals trade literature
Capture Innovation from Lead Users: Utility Light Example
Capture Innovation from Lead Users: Utility Light Example
Internal Search:
Hints for Generating Many Concepts
Suspend judgment Generate a lot of ideas Infeasible ideas are welcome Use graphical and physical media Make analogies Wish and wonder Solve the conflict Use related stimuli Use unrelated stimuli Set quantitative goals Use the gallery method Trade ideas in a group
Systematic Exploration:
Concept Combination Table