| Global Product: Opportunities and Challenges | p. 1 |
| Global Products and You | p. 1 |
| What is a Global Product? | p. 1 |
| Why are Global Products Important? | p. 2 |
| The Challenge of Global Products - Customer View | p. 4 |
| The Challenge of Global Products - Company View | p. 4 |
| Practical Considerations and Potential Risks | p. 6 |
| Mixed Fortunes | p. 10 |
| Global Products: Good News, Bad News and Best News | p. 10 |
| Global Product and Product Deployment Capability | p. 11 |
| Global Product: A Missed Opportunity | p. 12 |
| Global Products: Change and Complexity | p. 13 |
| Change | p. 13 |
| Complexity | p. 14 |
| Globalisation | p. 15 |
| Geopolitical Developments | p. 16 |
| Social and Health Problems | p. 17 |
| Changing Business Models | p. 17 |
| Improved Travel, Transport and Telecommunications | p. 18 |
| Revolutionary New Technologies | p. 19 |
| New IS Applications | p. 19 |
| New Company Structures | p. 21 |
| New Customer Requirements | p. 24 |
| Products | p. 25 |
| Shareholder Value | p. 26 |
| Market Mentality | p. 26 |
| Regulation and Deregulation | p. 27 |
| Environmental and Sustainable Development | p. 29 |
| Changing Roles | p. 30 |
| Inertia | p. 30 |
| Free Trade | p. 31 |
| Communities | p. 31 |
| Low-cost and Lean | p. 31 |
| The Result and the Requirement | p. 32 |
| The Risks of Not Meeting the Requirements | p. 33 |
| Problems: Causes and Action | p. 35 |
| Addressing Potential Problems | p. 35 |
| Causes for Problems | p. 35 |
| Multiple Causes and Effects | p. 37 |
| Root Cause and Network of Causes | p. 38 |
| Causes and Measures | p. 38 |
| Effects, Causes and the Details of the Busy Organisation | p. 40 |
| An Increasingly Complex Environment | p. 41 |
| Everyday Product Problems | p. 43 |
| Action | p. 45 |
| Global Products: At the Coalface | p. 47 |
| Introduction | p. 47 |
| ABB | p. 47 |
| Introduction | p. 47 |
| Sustainability | p. 48 |
| The Discussion | p. 49 |
| PPM | p. 51 |
| Actual Situation | p. 52 |
| Improvement Objective | p. 52 |
| Action | p. 52 |
| Results | p. 53 |
| Lessons Learned | p. 54 |
| Assessing and Managing Portfolio Risk | p. 55 |
| The Discussion | p. 55 |
| BSH Bosch und Siemens Hausgeräte GmbH | p. 59 |
| Introduction | p. 59 |
| Company Aims | p. 60 |
| Action | p. 60 |
| A Common Product Development Process | p. 60 |
| The PLM Implementation | p. 61 |
| Barriers and Success | p. 62 |
| Results | p. 63 |
| Lessons Learned | p. 63 |
| Next Steps | p. 64 |
| Dow Corning Corporation | p. 64 |
| Background | p. 65 |
| The Situation | p. 65 |
| Action | p. 66 |
| Results | p. 67 |
| Lessons Learned | p. 67 |
| Habasit | p. 68 |
| Introduction | p. 68 |
| The Situation | p. 69 |
| Action | p. 70 |
| Results | p. 72 |
| Magna Steyr | p. 73 |
| Background | p. 74 |
| Original Aim | p. 74 |
| Action | p. 74 |
| Barriers and Success | p. 75 |
| Results | p. 75 |
| Lessons Learned | p. 76 |
| Next Steps | p. 76 |
| Siemens | p. 76 |
| Introduction | p. 76 |
| Processes | p. 77 |
| Introducing a Process Mentality | p. 78 |
| Digital Factory | p. 79 |
| Product Data Management | p. 80 |
| Digital Product | p. 81 |
| Innovation | p. 81 |
| GAC | p. 82 |
| Introduction | p. 82 |
| Background | p. 82 |
| Original Aim | p. 83 |
| Findings | p. 83 |
| Action | p. 87 |
| Results | p. 88 |
| Lessons Learned and Best Practices | p. 89 |
| Similarity of Situation | p. 89 |
| Managing for Action | p. 89 |
| Ground Rules | p. 89 |
| Think Global | p. 90 |
| Understand the Global Market | p. 90 |
| Select the Markets | p. 90 |
| Select the Competitive Battleground | p. 90 |
| Global Product Strategy | p. 90 |
| Upfront Planning | p. 91 |
| Prescriptive Approach | p. 91 |
| Clear and Common Terminology | p. 91 |
| Architectures and Models | p. 92 |
| Digital Product and Digital Manufacturing | p. 92 |
| Product Strategy | p. 92 |
| Managed Complexity and Change OEM | p. 92 |
| Global Complex Assembly Provider | p. 93 |
| Low-cost Commodity Supplier | p. 93 |
| Product Portfolio and Product Architecture | p. 93 |
| Beyond the Product | p. 94 |
| Getting the Deployment Capability Foundations Right | p. 96 |
| Extending the Deployment Capability | p. 97 |
| To a Structured Framework | p. 99 |
| From Dog's Dinner to Structured Framework | p. 99 |
| The Product | p. 100 |
| Processes | p. 101 |
| Data and Documents | p. 102 |
| Applications | p. 105 |
| Methods | p. 106 |
| Facilities and Equipment | p. 107 |
| People | p. 107 |
| Organisational Structure | p. 108 |
| Metrics | p. 108 |
| A Framework for Action | p. 108 |
| Pains and Gains Throughout the Lifecycle | p. 109 |
| A Grid | p. 112 |
| Benefits of the Grid | p. 113 |
| PLM Enabling Global Products | p. 115 |
| Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) | p. 115 |
| The Emergence of PLM | p. 116 |
| Key Characteristics of PLM | p. 116 |
| Focus of PLM | p. 117 |
| Applicablility of PLM | p. 118 |
| Functions of PLM | p. 119 |
| Importance of PLM | p. 119 |
| Benefits of PLM | p. 120 |
| Metrics and Targets of PLM | p. 123 |
| Comparison of the Old and New Paradigms | p. 124 |
| Key Points for the CEO | p. 125 |
| PLM Applications | p. 126 |
| Generic PLM Applications | p. 127 |
| Data Management / Document Management | p. 127 |
| Part Management / Product Management | p. 127 |
| Process Management / Workflow Management | p. 127 |
| Program Management / Project Management | p. 127 |
| Collaboration Management | p. 128 |
| Visualisation | p. 128 |
| Integration | p. 128 |
| Infrastructure Management | p. 128 |
| Idea Management | p. 128 |
| Product Feedback Management | p. 128 |
| Task-focused PLM Applications | p. 129 |
| Product Portfolio Management | p. 129 |
| Idea Generation Management | p. 129 |
| Requirements and Specifications Management | p. 129 |
| Collaborative Product Definition Management | p. 129 |
| Supplier and Sourcing Management | p. 129 |
| Manufacturing Management | p. 130 |
| Maintenance Management | p. 130 |
| Environment, Health and Safety Management | p. 130 |
| Intellectual Property Management | p. 130 |
| Local Performance Improvements | p. 131 |
| Improving the Business | p. 131 |
| Improvement Approaches | p. 132 |
| The Way Forward to PLM | p. 145 |
| Vision Statements to Work with | p. 145 |
| Vision, Need, Purpose, Benefit | p. 146 |
| Expected Difficulties with a PLM Vision | p. 147 |
| The Deliverable from the Vision Development Activity | p. 150 |
| Basic Beliefs about PLM | p. 150 |
| Components of the PLM Vision | p. 151 |
| Top-down Vision | p. 152 |
| Detail for Each Component | p. 154 |
| Vision, Strategy, Plan and Metrics | p. 156 |
| Products | p. 156 |
| Product Focus | p. 157 |
| Product Portfolio | p. 157 |
| Five-year Strategy and Plan for Product Families and Products | p. 158 |
| New Technologies | p. 158 |
| Progress with Products | p. 159 |
| Customers | p. 160 |
| Customer Focus | p. 160 |
| Voice of the Customer | p. 160 |
| Customer Involvement | p. 160 |
| Progress with Customers | p. 161 |
| Organisation | p. 161 |
| Product Family Teams | p. 161 |
| PLM Responsibilities | p. 162 |
| Product Development and Support Methodology | p. 163 |
| Management, Control and Visibility | p. 163 |
| Management | p. 163 |
| Visibility | p. 163 |
| Control | p. 164 |
| Lifecycle and Processes | p. 164 |
| Phases of the Product Lifecycle | p. 164 |
| Management of the Product Lifecycle | p. 164 |
| Lifecycle Design and Analysis of Products | p. 164 |
| Modeling and Analysis of the Lifecycle | p. 165 |
| Process Definition and Automation | p. 165 |
| Standard Processes Across the Lifecycle | p. 165 |
| Standard Methodologies Across the Lifecycle | p. 166 |
| Progress with Lifecycle and Processes | p. 166 |
| Collaboration | p. 167 |
| People and Culture | p. 167 |
| Team Culture | p. 167 |
| Skilled, Competent People | p. 168 |
| Quality Culture | p. 169 |
| Progress with People and Culture | p. 169 |
| Data, Information and Knowledge | p. 170 |
| Clean, Standard, Process-driven Data | p. 170 |
| Digital Data | p. 170 |
| Data Management | p. 170 |
| Legacy Data | p. 171 |
| Data Exchange | p. 171 |
| Progress with Data, Information and Knowledge | p. 171 |
| Facilities, Equipment, Applications and Interfaces | p. 171 |
| Facilities | p. 171 |
| Equipment | p. 172 |
| Application Standardisation Across Sites Across the Lifecycle | p. 172 |
| Interfaces | p. 172 |
| Mandatory Compliance and Voluntary Conformity | p. 173 |
| Mandatory Compliance | p. 173 |
| Voluntary Conformity | p. 173 |
| Security and Intelligence | p. 173 |
| Security | p. 173 |
| Intelligence | p. 174 |
| Current Status | p. 175 |
| Global Products are here. And where is PLM? | p. 175 |
| PLM in Industry | p. 176 |
| PLM Managers | p. 179 |
| Level 1: Archipelago of PLM Islands | p. 179 |
| Level 2: Frontier-crossing PLM | p. 180 |
| Level 3: Enterprise-wide PLM | p. 180 |
| Level 4: Patchwork PLM | p. 180 |
| Level 5: Enterprise-deep, Enterprise-wide PLM | p. 181 |
| Level 6: Global PLM | p. 181 |
| Middle Managers: Unsure of Reasons and Effects | p. 182 |
| Cost, Quality, Time, Business Process Improvement | p. 182 |
| Innovation | p. 183 |
| Compliance | p. 183 |
| Mechatronic Products | p. 183 |
| Collaboration | p. 183 |
| Intellectual Property Management | p. 184 |
| Headway | p. 184 |
| Executives | p. 184 |
| Company Dilemma | p. 185 |
| Personal Dilemma | p. 186 |
| Going Nowhere | p. 188 |
| Examples of the PLM Dilemma | p. 189 |
| Overcoming the PLM Dilemma in Three Months | p. 192 |
| PLM Initiative | p. 193 |
| PLM Initiatives Range from Strategic to Tactical | p. 195 |
| The 10 Step Approach to PLM | p. 198 |
| Results of Use of the Ten Step Approach | p. 202 |
| Changes for Global Products and PLM | p. 205 |
| Changing Roles of Product Organisations | p. 205 |
| Increased Regulation of Product Companies | p. 206 |
| Better Managed Product Companies | p. 207 |
| A Multitude of New Products | p. 208 |
| More Product-related Services on the Web | p. 208 |
| Breakthrough Computer Aided Product Development | p. 208 |
| Bibliography | p. 209 |
| Index | p. 211 |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |