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Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation

Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation. Chapter 4: New Product Development Process: Managing the Idea Infrastructure. Chapter 4: Learning Objectives. Describe the new product development process and how it affects company and SC success.

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Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation

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  1. Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation Chapter 4: New Product Development Process: Managing the Idea Infrastructure

  2. Chapter 4: Learning Objectives • Describe the new product development process and how it affects company and SC success. • List the risks involved in the new product process. Explain how to mitigate these risks.

  3. Chapter 4: Learning Objectives • Describe the marketing process and discuss its role in the new product process. • Define target costing and explain its role in developing new products and services.

  4. Chapter 4: Learning Objectives • Describe the finance process and discuss its role in the new product process. • Discuss EVA, profitability, and cash flow as key financial metrics for organizations.

  5. New Product Development • New product development is risky and expensive. • More than 9 out of 10 products fail. • New product development is cross-functional: • Marketing identifies unfilled customer needs • R&D conceptualizes and develops the product • Finance verifies that it is economically viable • SC leaders rely on teaming which includes suppliers and customers.

  6. Customer Satisfaction Cycle

  7. Mitigating Risk Companies are faced with increasing levels of risk in today’s market. • Time Compression – product life cycles are being reduced, this increases risk because: • New products must continually be in development • Less time to capture development costs • Cost – new product development is expensive with costs regularly exceeding $100 million • 40% of all quality problems stem from poor design • 60-80% of a product's cost is determined during design

  8. Intel’s Plan to Mitigate Risk • Intel regularly faces product life cycles that are less than 6 months. • Integrated circuit development cost can exceed $30 million, requires $1 billion market to justify expense. • To mitigate risk, Intel analyzes 8 risk factors:

  9. Intel’s Plan to Mitigate Risk • Intel uses a “scorecard” to add visibility to risk in new product development. • Additional actions taken: • Clear “owner” for each risk reduction plan • Cross-functional teams • Specific timetables are established for risk reduction progress • Progress is regularly reported to top management • High risk aspects are highlighted not glossed over • Results: Nearly eliminated surprises during development

  10. Intel’s Risk Scorecard

  11. Early Supplier Involvement (ESI) • ESI is a key element of innovation strategies. • ESI accounts for one-third of the reduction in labor-hours and 4-5 months of the shorter development cycle in the auto industry. • Products introduced on-time but 50% over budget, realized only a 4% reduction in profit. • Products introduced on budget but six months late experience a 33% decrease in profits.

  12. Early Supplier Involvement (ESI) • ESI reduces risk when used in conjunction with New Product Development Teams • Reduces costly misunderstandings • Uses supplier competencies during design • Suppliers may have access to pertinent customer feedback • Suppliers may be aware of trends in technology or demand

  13. “Design for” Considerations New Product Development could consider: • Design for Manufacturability – ease of production • Design for Purchasing – support the product from the existing supply base • Design for Logistics – ease of distribution • Design for Environment – minimize environment impact • Design for Disassembly – disassemble, recycle, and reuse • Design for Reuse – new design using existing parts

  14. Modular Design • Modular products can be manufacturer in “pieces and parts” from a variety of manufacturers. • Modularity is facilitated by standardization • Reduces the risk of supplier dependency • Increases customer choice in terms of options • Creates opportunity for niche competitors

  15. Marketing and the Customer • Marketing’s job is to “get into the head” of the customer. • Customer information is used in planning: • Product - design of goods and services including both tangible and intangible elements • Price - determine the value of the need which is satisfied by the product • Place - having the product where it is needed, when it is needed, and in the correct quantities • Promotion - effective advertisement and sales techniques • Product Positioning relies on promotion and design to create niche appeal in a market segment

  16. The Marketing Process • The marketing process begins with understanding the company’s goals, strategy, image, and completive position. • Entails SWOT analysis

  17. New Product Development (NPD) • New product development begins with the recognition of some unmet customer need and a potential market large enough to justify exploration. • NPD can proceed either in a sequential or concurrent fashion. • Sequential is the traditional “over the wall” approach to NPD. • Sequential is time consuming and inefficient • Sequential results in lost opportunities to leverage supplier competencies in the design process.

  18. Concurrent NPD • Advocated by most supply chain leaders • Uses cross-functional teams to develop new products with targeted cost and features. • Typical teams will include managers from marketing, R&D, engineering, production, purchasing. • Many companies include customers, suppliers and service providers in NPD teams. • Use of target pricing and target costing

  19. Pricing to Meet Customer Demand • Customers determine the value of the need that is satisfied, this is the “Target Price” for new products. • Target Cost is the Target Price minus profit margin • Target Cost must include:

  20. Sequential Product Development

  21. Determinants of Target Price

  22. Target Costing and Target Pricing

  23. Competitive Target Costing - Example

  24. Target Cost Breakdown • Once the target cost has been determined, component level costs may be calculated. • Cross-functional teams again are employed: • Operations - knowledge of processes employed • Purchasing - supplier and parts knowledge • NPD Team - new design knowledge • Finance - knowledge of cost accounting • Also may include members from Packaging, Engineering, Logistics, Suppliers, and Customers

  25. Importance of Design on Total Cost • While the total cost of design might only be 5% of the total product cost, 70% of total product costs are committed to during the design phase. • It is therefore important to “get it right the first time”

  26. Strategic Tracking & Reporting Areas • Target - Has a target cost been determined that acknowledges both the margin requirements and the competitiveness of the products? • Team - Are cross-functional cost advisory teams chartered to identify relevant issues and competitors and to drive cost of goods to meet or beat the targets? • Activity Coordination - Are all the sub-teams meeting the timetables, and merging results as necessary? • Value and Features - Are we retaining the key features identified as critical to the customers as we refine the design and cost? • Progress - How are we progressing in our plan to get to best-in-class and target COGS?

  27. Strategic Tracking & Reporting Areas • Manufacturing Roadmap - Is there a manufacturing roadmap for the product? • Suppliers - Have our key suppliers been identified? • Risks - Have key risks in cost, supply, timing, pricing, and so on been identified and a plan developed for mitigating these risks? • Launch - For new products, will the product/offer be at best-in-class COGS when launched? • Communication - Have we communicated key news to top management, so that we continue to have their support to proceed, and don’t have any surprises?

  28. The Role of Finance • Finance and Accounting are organization’s scorekeepers • Communicate performance results throughout the organization and the outside world • Finance and Accounting may be imbedded into other areas of the organization but generally maintain a direct reporting relationship to corporate finance • Maintain objectivity and loyalty to the overall organization rather than a particular business or function

  29. Reporting Relationships

  30. Measures of Profit • Operating profit represents how much money, before tax, a company makes from its ongoing business of selling goods and services. • Profit before tax represents the sum of operating profits plus or minus gains and losses from other activities. • Includes investments, interest expense, and other financing activities

  31. Cost Category Sales Cost of Goods Gross Profit G & A Operating Profit Non-operating cost (interest expense) Profit before tax Taxes Profit after tax (000’s) $20,000 (1,250) 7,500 (2,500) 5,000 (1,250) 3,750 (1,250) $2,500 Profit and Loss Statement

  32. Cash Flow • Cash flows in to a company when it collects on receivables, borrows money, or sells stock. • Cash flows out from a company when it acquires plant and equipment, purchases raw material, produces goods, markets goods, repays investors, or repays debt. • Of interest is not only the aggregate amount of these flows but their timing.

  33. Cash Flow Cycle

  34. Income Statement and Cash Flows • While the income statement shows a pretax profit of $160,000, the statement of cash flows shows that we would not have enough cash to finance operations. • Managing cash flows and profit are critical for long term survival.

  35. Economic Value-Added (EVA) • EVA considers how much money the company makes from operations after taxes, less the cost of capital for the money tied up to make the product. • Gives a longer-term perspective on whether a project is generating or destroying value. • Goes beyond Net Present Value by considering timing of cash flows and the cost of capital tied up in accounts receivable, inventory, and related assets. EVA = Operating Profit – Taxes – (Total Capital Employed X Company’s Cost of Capital)

  36. A Return to the Opening Story Based on what you have now read and discussed: • If you were in Charlene’s situation, what questions would you ask marketing, finance, and new product development? • What do you think the organization structure, reporting relationships, and reward systems at Frozen Delight look like? Are this issues relevant to what is happening here? • What are some of the mechanisms within the organization that can be used to help these functions, and others within the company, work more closely towards common goals?

  37. Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation Supplement D: Evaluating the Return on a New Product

  38. Net Present Value • Time-Value-of-Money Concept • $1 today is worth more than $1 in the future • Discounts future cash flows in terms of present value to determine the net value added to the company by a project. • Considers: • Forecasts of revenues and costs • Expected life cycle or products and technology • Industry Trends

  39. Present Value An organization will receive $500 two years from now. At an interest rate of 10 percent, what is the present value of this future payment?

  40. Future Value An organization invests $500 for 5 years at an interest rate of 15 percent. What is the future value of this original $500?

  41. Net Present Value • The value of future cash flows minus the present value of the cost of the investment. • The greater the NPV, the better the investment • Negative NPVs represent projects that do not breakeven

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