Lean product development (LPD) is an approach to
product development
New product development (NPD) or product development in business and engineering covers the complete process of launching a new product to the market. Product development also includes the renewal of an existing product and introducing a product ...
that specializes in minimizing waste. Other core principles include putting people over the product and creating new values in services and physical products. This method of product development has been adopted by companies such as
Toyota
is a Japanese Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City, Aichi, Japan. It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on August 28, 1937. Toyota is the List of manuf ...
History of Lean Product Development
Toyota
is a Japanese Multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City, Aichi, Japan. It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on August 28, 1937. Toyota is the List of manuf ...
started its journey with lean product development at Toyota Loom Works (see
History of Toyota). Their early approach is notably different from
Lean manufacturing
Lean manufacturing is a methods of production, method of manufacturing goods aimed primarily at reducing times within the Operations management#Production systems, production system as well as response times from suppliers and customers. It is ...
which became famous through the book "
The Machine That Changed the World".
When Toyota started manufacturing cars, there was a difference in manufacturing conditions between
Japan
Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean off the northeast coast of the Asia, Asian mainland, it is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan and extends from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea ...
and the USA. Toyota had few educated engineers and little prior experience. Car companies in the US employed a well-educated workforce in the cities and benefited from the research and student skill sets of established engineering schools. To tackle this shortfall in knowledge and experience, Toyota conducted an incremental approach to development that built on their existing knowledge and became the basis of the lean systems Toyota uses today.
Allen Ward studied Toyota’s lean product development system and found parallels with the US
airplane industry. For instance, the Wright brothers’ method of constructing their airplanes became one of the legacies they passed on to the aviation industry. This approach enabled the USA to create one of World War II's most successful fighter planes from scratch in the short span of six months. After the war, Toyota incorporated many of the airline industry's findings into its product development methodology.
Differences between lean product development and lean production
While some basic principles and guidelines are applicable across Lean product development and
lean production (such as waste reduction), many applications of lean processes for development have focused more on the production approach.
The purpose of production is to manufacture products reliably within the margins of control. The flow of value is physically evident, and the link between cause and effect is easy to see. For example, feedback on adjusting the speed of production is immediately realized in an increase or decrease in rejected items. Any decisions made must be based on best practice.
On the other hand, the purpose of product development is to design new products that improve the lives of customers. This is a complex space where the flow of value can only be discerned at an abstract level and where cause and effect might be separated by time and space. For example, feedback on the decision to design a certain feature will not be received until the product has been built and is in the hands of the customer. This means that decisions are made on short-cycle experimentation, prototyping, set-based design, and emergent practice. A premium is placed on creating reusable knowledge and reducing risk at handover points.
An essential point about these differences is summarized in the advice Jim Womack gave Harley Davidson: "''Don't try to bring lean manufacturing upstream to product development. The application of Lean in product development and manufacturing are different. Some aspects may look similar, but they are not! Be wary of an expert with experience in lean manufacturing who claims to know product development.''"
The most common high-level concepts associated with lean product development are:
#
Creation of re-usable knowledge. Knowledge is created and maintained so that it can be leveraged for successive products or iterations.
# Set-based
concurrent engineering
Concurrent engineering (CE) or concurrent design and manufacturing is a work methodology emphasizing the parallelization of tasks (i.e. performing tasks concurrently), which is sometimes called simultaneous engineering or integrated product develo ...
. Different stages of product development run simultaneously rather than consecutively to decrease development time, improve productivity, and reduce costs.
# Teams of responsible experts. Lean product development organizations develop cross-functional teams and reward competence building in teams and individuals.
# Cadence and pull. Managers of lean product development organizations develop autonomous teams, where engineers plan their work and work their plans.
# Visual management.
Visualization is a main enabler of lean product development.
# Entrepreneurial system designer. The lean product development organization makes one person responsible for the engineering and aesthetic design, and market and business success, of the product.
# Flow management.
Results of Lean Product Development
Lean product development has been claimed to produce the following results:
* Increase innovation ten-fold
[Allen Ward - Lean Product and Process Development]
* Increase introduction of new products 400%-500%
[
Companies such as Toyota can attribute their success to lean product development. In 2000, Toyota launched 14 new products, a larger product line than GM's entire product offering. At that point, Toyota had just 70,000 employees while GM had more than five times as many.][
]
Applicability of lean product development
Researchers divide product development projects according to their need drivers:
* Wished: there is no such product on the market, only a wish for such a product. These projects can be on the edge of what is possible to do.
* Wanted: there are only a few basic similar products on the market that usually require improvement.
* Needed: there are enough products in existence so knowledge about this is abundant on the market.
For example, the mobile phone was a ''Wanted'' product in the 1990s because it was on the leading edge of technology. Today it is regarded as a ''Needed'' product. It is common in the market. There is enough knowledge in the public domain so that even small companies can make a good mobile phone.
Product development methods can be classified according to whether they are focused on handling stable or non-stable conditions. Lean product development is a dynamic method of product development that handles unstable conditions.
The influence of need drivers and stability (or lack of stability) on product development are illustrated in the table below.
See also
* Design for lean manufacturing
* Lean startup
Lean startup is a methodology for developing businesses and products that aims to shorten product development cycles and rapidly discover if a proposed business model is viable; this is achieved by adopting a combination of business-hypothesis-dr ...
* Lean project management
* Muntzing
Muntzing is the practice and technique of reducing the components inside an electronic appliance to the minimum required for it to sufficiently function in most operating conditions, reducing design margins above minimum requirements toward zero. ...
* Toyota Production System
The Toyota Production System (TPS) is an integrated socio-technical system, developed by Toyota, that comprises its management philosophy and practices. The TPS is a management system that organizes manufacturing and logistics for the automobile ...
COLETEK Product Development
is an example of an AI-based cloud platform for lean product development.
Notes and references
{{Reflist, 2
Design
Environmental design
Lean manufacturing
Product development