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November
23, 1998
Industrial Management & Technology |
| How
To Bring Out Better Products Faster |
| Among the ways: Substitute
science for trial-and-error testing and grill future clients
as never before.
By: Gene Bylinsky
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| Introduced only a year ago, a remarkable
machine from Xerox Corp. has captured 70% of the market for
high priced digitally controlled copiers. Known as the DC265-the
letters stand for "document center"-its no larger
than the usual office copier. But along with such basic chores
as copying pages of text, it can do awesome things. It can print
multiple images on the same page, and shrink or stretch those
images. It can perform three jobs at once, printing a 12- by
18-inch poster, say while scanning another document and preparing
a third.
Theres more. When connected to a binder, the DC265
can print and bind books up to 500 pages in length. When hooked
up to a network, it can be run by office workers from their
PC screens and keyboards. "Versatile" is an understatement
here. On the machines touch screen an improvement over
the buttons on rival Japanese copier-users can theoretically
call up 100 million job permutations. To carry out all these
commands, the DC265 holds in its innards more lines of software
code-about six million-than Microsofts much hyped NT
operating system, which is designed to run whole factories
and enterprises.
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Priced at $27,000 to $39,000, depending on options,
the DC265 illustrates how American industry has begun
to deliver superior products after years of trailing
Japan. Besides offering unprecedented convenience, the
machine is 20% more reliable than its analog predecessor.That
is because the DC265 embodies a new discipline of defect
elimination that substitutes scientific inquiry for
old trial-and-error methods.
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The new approach, which also helped speed the machines
development, is most clearly expressed in the Robust
Design methods originated in Japan by a remarkable quality
pioneer named Genichi Taguchi. The Taguchi approach
is now as much at home in many U.S. companies as it
is in Japan.
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The best new products not only hold up well but are also
designed to satisfy consumers, whose wishes many companies
are eagerly canvassing in ways that yield more specific information
than they get from conventional focus groups. With the DC265,
office workers demanded-and got-one of the few copiers that
can be rolled over carpets. Other factors are playing a big
part in developing the best products. Suppliers are being
told to deliver part of unprecedented exactitude. Elegant
software is enabling engineers to spot design flaws when they
show up on computer screens, long before products are made
even in prototype.
A host of companies, using Robust Design or homegrown engineering
methods that incorporate this and other approaches, are coming
up with outstanding new products. Among them:
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Hewlett-Packard. To accommodate
electrical engineers, HP has developed first oscilloscope-a
widely used measuring instrument-that can be operated
with a keyboard and mouse. |
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Ford Motor. Engineers at the
big automaker, using three-dimensional computer design
technology, can learn on a screen whether people will
have enough headroom in a new vehicle and whether parts
near the gas tank will cause it to overheat. |
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Goodyear. Eliminating guesswork,
the tire giant builds fewer experimental tires these days
but tests them more rigorously. One result: far fewer
costly prototypes. |
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Baldor Electric. Told by a
client that its motors were too noisy for exercise treadmills,
Baldor came up with quieter ones. |
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Varian Associates. To ensure
the reliability and performance of its linear accelerators
that deliver radiation doses to cancer patients, Varian
maintains unusually tight control over suppliers. |
Impelling this surge of excellence is fierce competition
and a buying public with soaring expectations. "We seem
to be nearing zero tolerance of defects by consumers,"
says Brock Hintzmann, a business-strategy planner at SRI International
in Menlo Park, Calif. "Even toys and recreation equipment,
which suffer abuse, are expected not to break".
The very term "quality" is acquiring a broader
meaning. Says Dan Dimancescu, co-author of the recent book
World-Class New Product Development and partner in the product-development
consulting firm Nexera/Sigma in Lexington, Mass.: "Now
quality means not only fit for use, but does the product meet
such requirements as ease of installation, low recall, and
low service and maintenance."
Happily, companies are finding that superior quality can
boost profits. Thats because the best development methods,
along with eliminating rework and waste, can put new models
in stores sooner. All his firms 250 clients that have
tackled the product-development process have been able to
cut costs by 30% and time to market by more than half, says
Michael E. McGrath, a director of the international consulting
firm Pittiglio Rabin Todd & McGrath (PRTM) at its office
in Weston, Mass. Its the high quality of American products,
McGrath asserts, that has been powering the U.S. economic
boom.
Curiously, the surge in quality isnt always reflected
in recall statistics. An alien landing on earth and perusing
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations (NHTSA)
data on motor vehicle recalls would conclude that cars are
getting worse. The NHTSA data show the biggest recalls since
1966 occurring in 1995 (18,276,449 motor vehicles), 1996 (17,622,929),
and 1997 (14,665,515).
| Tires
have improved phenomenally. The worst year for government
recalls was 1978, when 14,686,375 were called in. The
1997 figure: 7,146. |
There are two major reasons: The feds have tightened recall
regulations to the point where, according to Richard O. Schaum,
Chryslers vice president for quality and serviceability,
"a complaint by a single owner can initiate a federal
investigation leading to a recall." Furthermore, the
auto industry itself now originates 77% of all recalls, accounting
for 30% of vehicles brought in, because manufacturers are
more concerned about quality.
Other data confirm what every car owner knows: Vehicles are
much better these days. According to federal data, the average
American car now lasts eight or nine years, vs. five or six
20 years ago. By another measure, defects per 100 new cars,
U.S.-made passenger cars have soared in quality, even though
they still lag slightly behind Japanese brands, according
to J.D. Power & Associates, the auto industrys scorekeeper.
Some U.S. vehicles outclass their Japanese and European counterparts.
Consumers Unions automotive buying guide for 1998 rates
the Ford Explorer No. 1 in the sport-utility category and
Chryslers Town and Country as tops among minivans. Consumers
Union, which bases its rating on such criteria as performance,
safety, reliability, and value, puts vehicles through their
paces at its 327-acre auto test center in Haddam, Conn.
Recall data leave no doubt, meanwhile, that tires have improved
phenomenally. The government recalls tires mainly for safety
reasons. The worst year was 1978, when the NHTSA called in
14,686,375. The figure in 1997: a mere 7,146.
The improvement in American products, alas, is not across
the board. Ralph Nader, while lauding the auto industrys
"different attitude" toward quality, says he will
have no trouble filling his proposed Tort Museum in Winsted,
Conn., with industrial lemons. Among recent candidates that
Nader lists are faulty medical devices, toxic chemicals, failed
pharmaceuticals, bad industrial equipment, and automobile
transmissions that slip into reverse.
Some companies are struggling with product quality. An astounding
13% of all new PCs purchased are dead on arrival and fail
to start up on the first boot, according to a recent survey
by Windows Magazine. "If 13% of all new cars failed to
start on the first turn of the key, Detroit would be faced
with a tremendous outcry," says executive editor Eileen
McCooley.
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Product quality has been uneven because the methodology
of building reliable, high-quality products is still
new to U.S. industry. As recently as 1987, after surveying
major U.S. manufacturers of industrial and commercial
electronics equipment, Xerox executive Cary Kimmel sounded
like an explorer in a waterless desert. Kimmel said
he found no evidence of a replicable body of best practices.
Product development was at best a haphazard process
even at big-name companies.
At Hewlett-Packards
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test and instrument division, HPs biggest business
until computers became its dominant product, executives
recall that the prevailing practice as late as the 1980s
was what engineers called "designing for the next
bench." This meant they would ask a colleague at
the next workbench what sort of new instrument he would
like to see developed. Like many other companies, HP
paid little attention to what the client wanted.
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Some quality-control efforts, like the "quality
circles" that caught on in the late 1970s,
were watered-down versions of much more sophisticated
Japanese techniques. Homegrown quality efforts such
as zero defects and total quality control appeared in
the 1980s as U.S. industrys response to the Japanese
quality onslaught. Those programs had little impact
because of
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and lack of easily measured statistical goals. |
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| The best-known American contribution
that has achieved significant results is six sigma, an outgrowth
of statistical process control with a sizable borrowing of techniques
from Japanese quality programs. Companies with six-sigma programs
include Motorola, AlliedSignal, Polaroid, Alcoa, Seagate, and
GE. Six sigma has improved products such as Motorolas
new two-way radios for the consumer market and the processes
used in making Polaroid film.
As explained by Mikel J. Harry, an ex-Motorola engineer and
one of the developers of six sigma at that company, the Greek
letter sigma designates the standard deviation, from the average
in a bell curve, of any process or procedure. The common measurement
index under six sigma is "defects per million units."
A unit can be almost anything-component, piece of material,
line of code, administrative form.
| Mikel
Harry thinks that the average company in the Western world
is at a four-sigma level, while six sigma is not uncommon
in Japan. |
The sigma value indicates how often defects are likely to
occur, and the differences are vast: Three sigma means 66,807
defects per million, four sigma 6,210 defects, and six sigma
only 3.4 defects. Ideally, as sigma increases, cost and cycle
time go down and product quality rises. Harry thinks that
the average company in the Western world is still operating
at a four-sigma level, while in Japan the attainment of six
sigma is not uncommon.
This doesnt mean that Toyota, say, produces only 3.4
defective cars per million. The 3.4 figure applies to one
million "opportunities" for errors, which can occur
in any of 1,000 different components of a car being built.
Thats why, even among Japanese cars, J.D. Power found
69 defects per 100 cars last year, compare with 91 among American
cars.
Six sigma is a complicated system, full of abstruse statistics
and math. Harry concedes that its difficult to put in
place. That may be one reason small companies are charged
$40,000 per participant in a four-week course licensed by
the Six Sigma Academy in Scottsdale, Ariz., which he heads.
The course is given by the American Society for Quality in
Milwaukee. Big companies pay the academy a hefty $1 million
per $1 billion in sales to participate in its program, with
the fee topping off at $6 million. For the fee, the company
gets consulting help as well as the academys books,
teaching materials, and simulations. Harry says companies
that have tried to put six sigma in place on their own-without
the help of consultants like himself-often have given up.
Whirlpool, on the other hand, successfully uses its own version
of six sigma in product development.
CEO Jack Welch of GE, which embraced the system in 1995,
says he wants his managers to be "committed zealots"
of six sigma. The company credits it with adding $300 million
to last years operating income, and the commitment shows
at GE Plastics in Pittsfield, Mass. Six sigma, says general
manager Ferdinando "Nani" Beccalli, forces GE Plastics
to try harder to meet stringent client demands. For example,
Beccalli says, the color consistency and processibility of
GEs Lexan plastic have improved under the six-sigma
discipline.
GE aims to build better appliances too. Many of them get
good marks for performance from Consumer Reports. But an article
in the magazine last May, based on subscribers repair
experience with machines between 1992 and 1997-machines designed
before the companys six-sigma effort was fully under
way-described GE refrigerators, washing machines, and dryers
as among the "less reliable" makes.
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David M. Cote, president of the GE Appliance division
in Louisville, says "I fundamentally disagree with
Consumer Reports assessment. Weve built
a very strong brand over a lot of years by providing
high-quality products. And that quality is getting better
everyday." Introducing six sigma, Cote allows,
takes time: "The magnitude of getting this job
done is bigger than anyone expects."
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The effort may be bearing fruit. GE ranges
were already getting good marks from Consumer Reports
when GE Appliances last spring introduced the TrueTemp
gas range, the divisions first product fully designed
with six sigma. GE describes it as "the most accurate
oven in America"-set it at 350 degrees, and thats
what youll get-and one that can boil water faster
than any other. Products like TrueTemp, GE says, |
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are a response to what the buying public wants. Says
Lynn Pendergrass, a GE Appliances executive whose responsibilities
include client soundings: "Our engineers have to
start with what the consumers have told us."
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To the rescue of U.S. companies struggling to improve product
quality-and improve it faster-comes what many product developers
view as a more effective system than six sigma. This is Robust
Design, whose originator, Genichi Taguchi, is Japans
counterpart of the late, legendary W. Edwards Deming, the
American who set Japan on its quality road. Long after he
won recognition in Japan, Taguchi in 1997 was elected to Americas
Automotive Hall of Fame. Among his countrymen, only Eiji Toyoda
and Soichiro Honda have received this honor.
| The
Taguchi method grabs a problem by the throat, going directly
to the phenomenon torque, electrical charge, heat
flux that's causing trouble. |
Taguchis methodology has caught fire at companies as
diverse as HP, Ford, GM, Chrysler, Boeing, Eastman Kodak,
Honda of American, ITT Defense & Electronics, Hughes Aircraft,
LSI Logic, and Rockwell Space Systems, as well as Xerox. With
initial help from Ford, Taguchi established the American Supplier
Institute in the Detroit suburb of Livonia in 1980, with Deming
as one of its founders. Now 75, the quite-spoken Taguchi,
a Ph.D. in science Japanese degrees dont specify what
field, but his thesis was in quality engineering spends most
of his time running his consulting business in Japan. Among
other things, hes designing an anticollision sensing
system for Japanese automakers.
His approach, known in Japan as quality engineering, gets
some of the credit for those high-quality Sony TVs and Toyota
cars, among other fine Japanese products. Taguchis teachings
are spreading through U.S. industry, thanks in part to his
energetic son Shin, 43, who lives in Michigan and runs the
American Supplier Institute. Informally called the Taguchi
Institute, the not-for-profit organization charges $15,000
to put an engineer through a four-week training course.
The Taguchi quality-building philosophy is powerful and elegantly
simple. Six sigma is an elaborate system-some would say overelaborate-for
changing an entire organizations mindset to minimize
errant processes and parts. The Taguchi method grabs a quality
problem by the throat. It goes directly to the basic physics
and thermodynamics of the phenomenon-torque, electrical charge,
heat flux, whatever-thats causing trouble, and solves
the problem during the early design phase.
While engineers at Italian tiremaker Pirelli, for example,
struggled in vain in the early 1990s to eliminate an annoying
squeal produced by a rubber timing belt that links automobiles
crankshafts, camshafts, and water pumps-its failure can ruin
a car engine-they applied the usual trial-and-error approach.
This included changing the belts width, tightening the
assembly, and so on. Nothing worked. The Italians called in
experts from the Taguchi Institute, who got to the essence
of the problem: energy transfer by the belt.
In this case, the energy input is power from the crankshaft,
and the useful output is power transferred by the belt to
the camshaft. The squeal was a product of energy being wasted.
Looking at the ratio between useful output and wasted output,
Taguchi engineers concluded that the materials in the belt
had to be changed. This was done at no increase in cost, and
the life of the belt was doubled.
The basic difference between six sigma and Taguchis
robust engineering, says John F. Elter, vice president and
chief engineer in the office products division at Xerox, is
that "six sigma yields parts that meet specs, while Taguchi
produces parts that avoid failure. The six-sigma process is
okay, but the Taguchi method is more robust both in its logic
and its methodology." Counters Six Sigma Academys
Harry: "Ours is a much more global methodology, encompassing
not just design but research and development, and reaching
back into the sales process."
One of the most impressive applications of the Taguchi method
was carried out by Elter as he led the development of the
jack-of-all-trades DC265 copier. This was no ordinary model
change, since Elter and his team faced the challenge of building
Xeroxs first digital copier, a sharp departure from
analog machines. Yet the DC265 was ready in seven years, three
years faster than its predecessor.
Robust Design is not the only reason DC265 machines, now
being produced at a rate of nearly 250 a day, have won a dominant
market share sooner than even Xerox expected. The company
added a big dollop of American ingenuity. The project, says
Elter, began as "a clean sheet-starting from scratch.
We had the opportunity to rethink not only how a part is designed
but how it would be manufactured and serviced." All told,
1,5000 people worked on the DC265 at one time or another.
Applying a brand-new product architecture-the internal structure
of the machine-Elter and his colleagues designed the new copier
in large modules. This improves quality because the parts
of the machine more likely to fail are all in modules that
the user can replace without waiting for a repair engineer
to show up. The DC265, furthermore, can be fixed from afar
by Xerox engineers through a digital remote repair service
called Sixth Sense. DC265 has 250 parts, a tenth as many as
earlier Xerox copiers. To avoid the use of brackets, which
would have required additional parts and made the fit less
precise, parts and subsystems were made to fit so snugly than
no mechanical adjustments are necessary in this machine.
Robust engineering meant that the machines designers
went to the core of quality problems and did things right
the first time. The Taguchi father-and-son team was brought
in to teach its principles to 190 Xerox engineers. The engineers
applied this wisdom, among other things, to control paper
movement tightly to reduce jamming. They accomplished this
by reducing the variability in paper arrival time and its
orientation within the machine by 66%. They also improved
the uniformity of the optical coating in the scanner that
reads the documents, coming up with the ideal thickness in
18 tries, instead of 4,000 it would have taken with conventional
trial-and-error engineering.
From the outset, Xerox engineers gave their ear to potential
users. Intimate contact with clients that goes far beyond
focus groups, rarity as recently as six or seven years ago,
is now commonplace in betterrun companies, including those
using six sigma and other product-development approaches.
The secret, as many manufacturers are discovering, is to grill
users about how they use machines, not about the machines
technology. The idea, born in a Japanese shipyard in the 1960s
and belatedly spreading through U.S. industry, is called quality
function deployment.
Early in the DC265 project, potential users interacted with
design engineers at Xeroxs development center in suburban
Rochester, N.Y. The users included 250 secretaries and other
administrative personnel. From the future users comments,
Xerox engineers selected three principal requirements: The
machine had to produce printed matter of professional quality;
it had to be free of jams; and it had to be easy to fix in
case of breakdowns. One user-friendly idea-making the DC265
one of the few office copies that can be rolled across carpets-apparently
had never occurred to Xeroxs design engineers.
In the jargon of engineers, this newly respected user input
is called the voice of the client. Says Elter: "We took
the voice of the client to production on the factory floor.
For example, to make the machines output look professional,
we wrote specs for granularity of the toner. That spec is
met by going into and fixing the subsystem that puts the toner
on the roll."
Xeroxs solicitude for clients is a dramatic change
from American industrys practices eight years ago, when
HP executive Edith Wilson did a study to find out why some
new products gain market share and profitability while others
dont. She concluded that when products fizzle, in seven
out of ten cases the developers failed to learn about users
wishes. Even today, Wilson believes, "the biggest trap
for manufacturers to overcome in product design is for engineers
to do client research with preconceived notions of what the
solution is going to be."
Wilsons company goes out of its way to avoid this kind
of insularity. Diligent consumer soundings, as well as Robust
Design, have contributed to HPs success. The company
derives 60% of its revenues from products introduced in the
past two years. "The old paradigm said that you could
have either quality or time to market," says Patrick
J. Byrne, general manager of HPs big instrument-making
division in Colorado Springs. "The new paradigm says
that you can have both. Our central competitive advantage
comes from the excellence of our product generation process."
During product development, says Byrne, "there comes
a point where you have to look yourself in the eye and ask,
Do I really understand this? Thats when
we use the Taguchi method to evaluate the underlying mechanism
of failure." The evaluation takes place when groups of
the instrument divisions engineers pile into a conference
room. Each is issued a pad of Post-it notes and asked to list
his ten best ideas on how to solve a problem.
Similar answers are grouped together, stuck on a whiteboard,
and diagrammed. The participants are then able to arrive at
a clear statement of the problem. Byrne likes this participatory
aspect of Taguchis method, and the ability to rely on
the expertise of many specialists closest to the problem.
"Taguchi has really led the way in turning this into
a methodology," he says. "I call it structured common
sense. Thats what a good process is."
Just how productive HPs dialogue with clients can be
is illustrated by one of the instrument divisions newest
products. Following a brainstorming session with clients-a
"high-octane engagement," Byrne recalls-HP came
up with that oscilloscope that can be operated with a keyboard
and mouse. The electrical engineers counterpart of a
doctors stethoscope, the device is used to measure such
things as timing and voltage signals. The new oscilloscope,
called Infinium and priced at $9,995 to $29,999, is also the
first that can be plugged into a computer network to make
its measurements accessible to many engineers directly on
their computer screens.
Few companies have greater enthusiasm for Taguchi than Ford,
one of the earliest U.S. companies to show interest in his
methods. "We use Taguchi techniques in almost every aspect
of our business, from design of experiments to process control
in manufacturing," says Paul Plumberg, the automakers
director of computerized product-development systems. In one
project, his company chopped ten months off the development
time for a new and better fuel pump.
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In Fords case, Robust Design is buttressed with
the elaborate use of computerized design to catch mistakes
before they wind up in vehicles on the highway. "The
big change that happened between the late 1980s and
1990s," says Jack Harkins, principal at the Roche
Harkins design firm in Hollis, N.H., "is that industry
went from drafting on paper to the two-dimensional computer
representation of 3-D objects, to 3-D computer-aided
design (CAD) development of objects in the computer.
Today you start in 3-D, develop a product in 3-D, and
test it in 3-D. You cut your tools in 3-D, and you manufacture
in 3-D. You can deliver product designs that are much
more mature. Its a dramatic change."
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| At Ford, a company-wide program called
C3P, which seeks to unify CAD, computer-aided manufacturing
(CAM), computer-aided engineering (CAE), and product information
management (PIM), is breaking down the walls between product
design, analysis manufacturing, and information management.
The C3P software comes from SDRC of Milford, Ohio; Engineering
Animation of Ames, Iowa; Technomatrix, and Israeli company;
and other vendors. The C3P program is being used on all of Fords
new-vehicle development programs. Fords aim is to speed
new-model development from the present 37 months to 24 months,
which would put it on a par with Toyota.
"This program is being implemented to give us the ability
to see the whole vehicle digitally, to give the right information
to the right people to make the right decisions," says
Richard Riff, manager of the C3P project. Riff jets around
the world to make sure the system is being installed correctly
not only at Fords far-flung facilities but also at Jaguar,
which Ford owns; at Mazda, in which Ford holds a minority
stake; and at major suppliers, all of which are being linked
via the Internet. Looking at a proposed part design, says
Riff, a supplier will be able to say. "My process can
be a bit cheaper if you make this hole 100 millimeters wide."
| New product-development
methods have enabled Goodyear, among others, to develop
a tire that can travel 50 miles at 55 mph with a big hole
and no air. |
At Ford, as they do at other automakers, designers start
by sketching cars electronically on their computer screens.
That enables them to test all sorts of things. A 3-D computer
model of the cars interior, for example, can be blended
into the electronic body to see if it is compatible with engineering
data. For purposes of solving design problems, the car on
the screen, built from math equations, is just as real-and
more useful-than one made of metal. Parts can be subjected
to dynamic testing on the computer to see how they hold up
to heat, pressure, impact, or wear.
The interior of the car can also be tried out on digital
manikins for comfort and roominess. These "passengers"
have both the exterior and interior features of real people,
including 17 joints in their spines. Seated in the car, they
can rotate their heads and bend their necks. Available on
software from Engineering Animation, the manikins include
"parents" named Transom Jack and Transom Jill, plus
"children."
At Fords advanced engineering center in Dearborn, Mich.,
David B. Roberts, a supervisor in the C3P office, demonstrates
other C3P possibilities. In a 3-D cutout model of a cars
interior displayed don a big computer screen, Roberts touches
the gas tank with a mouse pointer and makes it disappear.
He rotates the cars undercarriage to see what parts
adjoin the tank, to make sure none generate heat that could
reach the tank and its combustible contents. In the past,
a tape measure on a car model built of wood and clay would
have been used to determine the distance between heat-generating
parts and the fuel tank.
Many companies have taken their own paths in the pursuit
of better products, using principles similar to six sigma
or Robust Design without formally adopting those methods.
At Goodyear, for example, science is replacing trial and error
in tire development. "Using the old ways, youd
make an experimental tire and take it out for a spin to find
out whether youd done a good job," says Frederick
"Rick" Vannan, Goodyears director of advanced-product
and process technology. Today, he says, "weve moved
from kindergarten-type testing to Ph.D-type testing."
Computer modeling tools now enable Goodyear designer to figure
out whether a tire will be good for resisting hydroplaning,
for wet traction, and for handling and cornering. "It
saves a lot of money because you dont have to build
as many experimental tires," Vannan says. "You probably
do just as many miles of testing as in the past, but youre
doing it on exactly the right candidate, not wasting it on
the wrong one." The new methods have enabled Goodyear,
among others, to develop a premium-priced tire that can travel
50 miles at 55 mph with a big hole and no air.
The voice of the client, too, is getting a response in many
other corners of industry. In 1992, Baldor, the big maker
of electric motors in Fort Smith, Ark., learned that some
of its motors were too noisy to be incorporated into exercise
treadmills made by Cybex of Medway, Mass. Sot the manager
of its plant that made this kind of motor sent eight blue-collar
workers by corporate jet to Cybex. Mingling with Cybex workers,
the visitors established first-name rapport and determined
what some of the problems were. The noise level was reduced
to Cybexs satisfaction.
Another key to quality, whatever the product-development
methodology, is making suppliers toe the line. At Varian Associates
Oncology Systems, headquartered in Palo Alto, President Timothy
E. Guertin recalls how "it used to be that a supplier
would change a form of coating or a composition of metals
and not tell us." If every there were machines in which
quality and reliability are absolute musts, it is varians
linear accelerators, known as Clinacs, which are used to treat
cancer patients with finely pointed beams of radiation.
The latest version of the Clinac, containing 7,000 parts,
sells for $900,000 to $1.1 million. Since the machines weigh
17,000 pounds and as a practical matter cant be recalled
in case of a malfunction, they have to be built right the
first time around. Purified water is used to cool the Clinac,
and that can lead to problems. Some years ago, the water began
damaging a part after is supplier made an unannounced change
in the metal it was using. No more. Today suppliers are required
to notify Varian beforehand of any changes hey propose to
make.
To some experts, products like Varians Clinac and Xeroxs
DC265 show that U.S. industry has found better ways to develop
products than the Japanese have. Dimancescu of Nextera/Sigma
says the Americans have gone beyond the "sine qua nons"
of quality to a "simulation environment where were
able to recreate complex solution very early in the game,
based on a much more profound understanding of the information
necessary to produce better products. I think we have developed
the ability to understand the client, the regulatory environment,
and the downstream effort far more sensitively than the Japanese.
The Japanese still do well, but I think we, as a culture,
have learned to do it better."
Thats undoubtedly true of outstanding American companies,
though not of the others. And even those that have reached
the championship category have done it with the aid of some
very smart people from the Land of the Rising Sun.
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