Commercializing
Great Products with Design for Six Sigma
To
remain competitive,
companies must become more effective at identifying, developing, and
commercializing new products and services. Design for Six Sigma (DFSS)
is the most powerful approach available for achieving these goals. Now,
for the first time, there's a comprehensive, hands-on guide to
utilizing DFSS in real-world product development.
Using a start-to-finish case study, a practical roadmap, and easy
templates, Commercializing
Great Products with Design for
Six Sigma
shows how to optimize every stage of product
commercialization. Drawing on 65 years of product experience, the
authors show how to make better product and portfolio decisions;
develop better business cases and benefits assessments; create better
concepts and designs; scale up manufacturing more effectively; and
execute better launches.
Learn how to:
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Establish infrastructure to
support successful commercialization
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Use Stage Gate® processes
to minimize risk and optimize the use of people and resources
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Create better plans: Segment
markets, define product value, estimate financial value, and position
new products for success
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Capture the "voice of the
customer," analyze it, and use it to drive development
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Choose the right tools:
Ideation, Pugh Concept Selection, QFD, TRIZ, and much more
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Develop better products and
processes: process maps, cause and effects matrices, failure modes,
effect analysis, statistical and data analysis tools, and more
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Test and improve product
performance and reliability
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Perform post-mortems and apply
what you've learned to your next project
Whether you're an
executive, engineer, designer,
marketer, or quality professional, Commercializing Great Products with
Design for Six Sigma will help you identify more valuable product
concepts and translate them into high-impact revenue sources.
The series includes
two Short Cuts, also authored by
Perry and Bacon. Short Cuts are short, concise, PDF documents designed
specifically for busy technical professionals. The Short Cut titles
are: Statistical Tolerancing in Design for Six Sigma (Digital Short
Cut) (August 2006) and The Business Case for Design for Six Sigma
(Digital Short Cut) (September, 2006). For more information on Short
Cuts, please visit: www.informit.com/shortcuts
About
the Authors
Randy
Perry
is a Master
Consultant and Program Manager with Sigma Breakthrough Technologies,
Inc. Randy has more than thirty years of experience in product
development, marketing, and operations productivity improvement. He
spent eighteen years with AlliedSignal Corporation during the
implementation of Six Sigma under the leadership of Larry Bossidy. He
has performed consulting and training with many major companies,
including Seagate, Eastman Chemical, Tyco, Celanese. and BASF. Randy
has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in chemical
engineering
from N.C. State University and an MBA from Duke University. He is a
certified Six Sigma Black Belt, and lives in Midlothian, Virginia.
David
Bacon
is a Master
Consultant with Sigma Breakthrough Technologies, Inc., with
responsibilities for program development and training in the Master
Black Belt program. During the past forty years he has provided
consulting support in quality and productivity improvement to more than
fifty companies, including W.R. Grace, Chemtura, Bayer MaterialScience,
Celanese, Tyco Electronics, and Tyco Healthcare. David is a Fellow of
the American Statistical Association and the Canadian Society for
Chemical Engineering. He lives on a farm outside of Picton, Ontario,
Canada.
Click to view the Table of
Contents
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Commercializing
Great Products with
Design for Six Sigmas
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Randy C.
Perry and David W. Bacon
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Published by
Prentice Hall
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©2007,
Cloth, 736 pp
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ISBN:
0-13-238599-6, $89.99
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Available at
Amazon.com
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