Module 5 Value Engineering
Module 5 Value Engineering
❏ Identify issues
❏ Prioritize Issues
❏ Drafts scopes and objective
❏ Establish evaluation factors
❏ Determine Study Team
❏ Collect Data
❏ Prepare for value study
2. Information Phase
❏ Functional analysis outlines the basic function of a product using a verb and a noun such as ‘boil water’ as in
the case of our kettle.
❏ The function analysis phase involves determining the functions of the project and identifying them with a
verb/noun combination for every element under evaluation. The function is defined as the set targets to be attained
through the execution of an element or a set of elements.
❏ Each of the identified functions is analyzed to determine if there are improvements to be made and if a new
function is required. An example of a function can be “disinfect water.”
4. Creative Phase
This step requires a certain amount of creative thinking by the team. A technique that
is useful for this type of analysis is brainstorming. This stage is concerned with
developing alternative
5. Evaluation Phase
❖ In this phase of the workshop, the VA team judges the ideas developed during
the creative phase.
❖ The VA team ranks the ideas.
➔ Ideas found to be irrelevant or not worthy of additional study are disregarded.
➔ Those ideas that represent the greatest potential for cost savings and improvements
are selected for development.
6. Development Phase
The team develops the selected ideas into alternatives (or proposals) with a sufficient
level of documentation to allow decision makers to determine if the alternative
should be implemented.
7. Presentation Phase
Objective: During the implementation and follow-up phase, management must assure
that approved recommendations are converted into actions.
Analysis
● Teardown analysis
● Cost analysis
● Value analysis
Teardown Analysis
Methodical analysis of a product to identify key cost drivers and their components &
functions.
Following are the formal steps in the Product teardown process.
• List Design Issues
• Prepare for Product Teardowns
• Examine the Distribution and Installation
• Disassemble, Measure and Analyze Data by Assemblies
• Form a Bill of Materials
Cost Analysis
● A functional cost analysis is a method that can be applied to examine the component
costs of a product in relation to the value as perceived by the customer. The outcome
of the analysis is to improve the value of the product while maintaining costs and/or
reduce the costs of the product without reducing value.
Steps in cost Analysis
1. Create a list of components
2. Determine the cost of each component
3. Determine the value of each component
4. Consider the value of functions
5. Generate alternatives that lead to reduced costs and/or increased value
6. Evaluate alternatives
Steps in value Analysis
Value Analysis
Value Analysis (VA) is concerned with existing products. It involves a current product
being analyzed and evaluated by a team, to reduce costs, improve product function or
both.
A significant part of VA is a technique called Functional Analysis, where the product is
broken down and reviewed as a number of assemblies.
What is Value?
The minimum money which has to be expended in purchasing or manufacturing a product
to create the appropriate use of esteem factors.
Division of Value
1. Use of functional Value
2. Esteem Value
3. Cost Value
4. Exchange Value
Advantages of Value Analysis
● It leads to improvements in product designs so that, most appropriate products are
produced.
● High quality (value) is maintained.
● All round efficiency is achieved by eliminating waste of various types.
● Cost savings provide a measure for judging managerial effectiveness.
● New ideas are generated and incorporated.
● Team spirit and morale are improved.
● Areas requiring attention and improvement are pinpointed.
Advantages of Value Analysis
At the Planning stage of development, there are
additional benefits to be derived from a Value
Engineering Workshop:
These are all most excellent business initiatives. You just need to invest the time to understand and research
them thoroughly including the business, customer, environmental and operational benefits, and the metrics and
Key Performance Indicators against which progress and success will be measured.
Step 2: Identify Key Business Stakeholders
● Once you identify the targeted business initiative, we want to identify the business
stakeholders who either impact or are impacted by the targeted business initiative.
Now the money step! Yep, once we know the targeted business initiative and the key
stakeholders, then we want to drive facilitated collaboration across the different
stakeholders to identify, validate, value and prioritize the decisions that these stakeholders
need to make in support of the targeted business initiative.
Step 4: Identify Supporting Predictions
● For each of the top priority decisions, you want to next identify the predictions that
each stakeholder needs to make in support of those decisions.
● Sometimes it is easier, when working with the business stakeholders, to ask them what
questions they need to answer to support their key decisions.
The next step is to work with the business stakeholders to identify what data you might need to make those
predictions. The trick for fueling data brainstorming builds upon the “Predictions” identified in Step 4. We
simply add the phrase “and what data might you need to make that prediction?” to the prediction statement.
For example:
● What will revenues and profits likely be next year…and what data you might need to make that
prediction? The data source suggestions might include commodity price history, economic conditions,
trade tariffs, fertilizer and pesticide prices, weather conditions, fuel prices and more.
● How much fertilizer will I likely need next planting season…and what data you might need to make
that prediction? The data source suggestions might include pesticide and herbicide usage history,
weather conditions, crops to be planted, pest forecasts, soil conditions, and more.
Step 6: Identify Supporting Architecture and Technologies
● Finally, we’ll need a Big Data and IoT architecture and technologies upon which we
can build the solution that delivers the business value.
● For example, in an IoT architecture, one will need to consider the architecture and
technology choices at the edge, platform (sometimes also referred to as the “Fog”) and
at the Enterprise (or Cloud) level
Summary
● If what your organization seeks is to exploit the potential of data science to power your business
models; then the Data Science Value Engineering Framework provides “How” the organization can do
it.
● The Value Engineering Framework starts with the identification of a key business initiative that not
only determines the sources of value, but also provides the framework for a laser-focus on delivering
business value and relevance.
● A diverse set of stakeholders is beneficial because it provides more perspectives on the key decisions
upon which the data science effort needs to focus.
● The heart of the Data Science Value Engineering Framework is the collaboration with the different
stakeholders to identify, validate, value and prioritize the key decisions (use cases) that they need to
make in support of the targeted business initiative.
● After gaining a thorough understanding of the top priority decisions (use cases) the analytics, data,
architecture and technology conversations now have a frame within which to work (by understanding
what’s important AND what’s not important).