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Product Development

What I learned: The Front End of Innovation is Disconnected from PLM

What I learned this week… came from The Front End of Innovation event in Boston. One thing that stuck in my mind from the event, based on conversations with end users and from presentations, is the lack of connection between the front end of innovation and the rest of the product lifecycle. Customers seem content…

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    Jeff Hojlo - June 1, 2009 - Filed Under: What I Learned - Tagged With: Innovation, Product Development, Customer Needs Management, Front End of Innovation, Ideation, PLM

    What I Learned: Innovation at 27,000 feet on Mount Everest?

    What I learned this week . . . came from The Front End of Innovation event in Boston. At day one of the event, Author Jim Collins (Good to Great, Built to Last, Why the Mighty Fall) gave a rousing presentation of findings from his latest research. According to his research, the reason mighty companies fail is not because of lack of innovation. In fact the ones that succeed in the harshest conditions, at “27,000 feet on Mount Everest,” are not necessarily ones who bring a lot of new products to market; it’s the companies that are disciplined in their innovation approach, and have the right people working on the right projects.

      Jeff Hojlo - May 27, 2009 - Filed Under: What I Learned - Tagged With: Ideation, PLM, Innovation, Product Development, Customer Needs Management, Front End of Innovation

      What I Learned: Flogging the “Facebook for Product Development” Horse

      What I learned this week… is that it is really fun to pick on Facebook because it doesn’t have the capabilities to support product innovation, product development, and engineering. Of course, it was never intended to and that is probably not a market that they are really very interested in. But it is fun, and also helps to bring home some of the requirements that are important for social computing in PLM. This post started as a reply to Stan’s comment on my “not building an airplane on Facebook post,” and I realized after about 17 pages of comments that maybe I had better turn it into a blog post. Thank you Stan for bringing up a lot of very good questions.

        Jim Brown - May 14, 2009 - Filed Under: What I Learned - Tagged With: IP, Photos, Security, PLM, Social Networking, Social Computing, Status, Engineering, Facebook, Innovation, Product Development, Business-Oriented Social Computing

        What I Learned: We are not Going to Design an Airplane on Facebook!

        What I learned this week … came from a participant at my session on Social Computing in PLM at COFES last month. A quote from the session has been haunting me since that time, and I haven’t been able to place my finger on why it has resonated in my head. I think because it is both meaningful to me and meaningless at the same time. The quote was “We are not going to build an airplane on Facebook!” The statement drew a lot of chuckles, and I have to believe it’s a true statement of fact. But I think why it haunts me is that people are willing to discount the value of a hugely important trend (the use of social computing technologies in business) because the examples they have don’t quite fit the way the currently work.

          Jim Brown - May 12, 2009 - Filed Under: What I Learned - Tagged With: Innovation, Manufacturers, Product Development, PLM, Social Computing, Engineering, Facebook

          How Does Social Computing in PLM Help Collaboration?

          What I learned this week … is based on responses and my own reflection stemming from my post
          Is Social Networking in PLM Just More Collaboration? from last week. In that post I talked about how social networking capabilities can add more than just collaboration by extending into “discovery.” But what I want to circle back on now is that yes, social networking capabilities can also play a significant role in collaboration. In my enthusiasm with what could happen for manufacturers that are willing to stretch the boundaries of their current business, I may have made some pretty big assumptions in regards to people understanding what is most likely their first step in embracing these technologies in product innovation and engineering – which is enhancing collaboration in design and product development. So in this post, I want to step back and comment on the near at hand values of social computing and PLM, and potentially put the horse back before the cart for many. Will social networking make your product development team as happy as this picture? Probably not, but it might just help make your products more profitable.

          • Insights

          Jim Brown - March 26, 2009 - Filed Under: Clarity on PLM, Insights, Insights & Activity - Tagged With: PLM, Social Computing, Product Development, Social Networking, Collaboration

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