Intellex Acquires Expert by Big Village

We're thrilled to announce that Intellex has acquired Expert by Big Village, effective March 22, 2024. This strategic move enhances our capabilities and strengthens our commitment to delivering exceptional solutions to our customers.

Stay tuned for more updates on how this acquisition will benefit our clients and experts.

For inquiries or more information, please contact us at info@intellex.com.

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Expert Details

Proven Methods for Building an Enduring Capability for Faster, Better Product Development

ID: 722050 Oregon, USA

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Expert has been influential in helping management improve "time to market" since 1984. He has guided manufacturers in many industries to develop integrated product development (IPD) systems, also known as concurrent development. Through analysis of a specific product development organization, he has discovered the gaps between departments that lead to delays, miscommunication, and wasted effort. He then works with management to build cross-functional development teams, define roles, responsibilities and authorities, and finally develop communication mechanisms for overcoming these organizational gaps. Expert also provides his expert advice through training workshops, in which the developers themselves discover how dysfunctional their current chimneys are and create their own means of overcoming them, thereby automatically building ownership in the solution. Expert has written on this subject. The title of this publication notwithstanding, Expert much prefers to avoid terms such as concurrent engineering (CE) and simultaneous engineering, because these overlook the vital links that engineering has with marketing, manufacturing, purchasing, quality, finance, and especially with customers. More inclusive terms include integrated development, integrated product and process development (IPPD), and simultaneous development.

Expert has spent fifteen years assisting companies around the world in accelerating or otherwise improving their design process. Although he is best known for his time to market techniques, he also works with managers to create processes for achieving their objectives of "more, better, faster." Often, he is called in to integrate design per se with its interdependent processes in marketing, manufacturing, and other departments. Sometimes it is a matter of building a flexible process that will efficiently accommodate both minor upgrades and major new platform developments. He has helped companies in many industries, high tech and "low" tech alike, to radically shorten their time to market by employing the tools of activity overlapping, partial co-location, incremental innovation, product architecture, and effective capacity management. No stranger to design techniques, Expert was involved in aircraft design and design automation software development before he left college with a Ph.D. in engineering.

All too often managers think of product development as an engineering or R&D function, since this department contributes most of the labor. Expert has helped these managers to appreciate that the links to the customer and customer needs through marketing and sales are absolutely critical, as are the links with downstream manufacturing, service, and testing functions. Often the difficulty is with the engineers themselves: They prefer to work in a vacuum without outside "interference." In this case, cross-functional team training, using the book he co-wrote, helps everyone involved to see the benefits and techniques of integrating development teams. Unfortunately, integrating teams is getting harder, because they are increasingly likely to be dispersed around the city or around the globe. Few teams recognize the disconnects, delays, and mistrust that multiply as they become "virtual." Expert overcomes these communication and trust breakdowns by helping the team to establish communication protocols and partially co-locate when and where they can. Dispersed or not, however, most often "teams" are weak because they are teams in name only: They have no authority, each member is involved only part time, the team is not evaluated or rewarded as a team, and functional managers tug at "their" members and overrule team decisions. Expert works with many such teams to help them and their managers to a build high-performance unit that can get its new product to market quickly.

Expert is a recognized expert in new product development, especially in techniques for speeding up development cycles. Along with Donald Reinertsen, he wrote a book on product development which has over 80,000 copies in use worldwide. Since 1984 he has been providing consulting and training specializing in product development techniques, especially in rapid development. Although speed is not always the primary objective, it turns out to be the best comprehensive metric we have for product development performance.

Expert doesn't believe that there is one set of "best practices" that applies universally. Instead, there is a whole kit of tools, some of which work best in some circumstances and some in others. For instance, quality function deployment (QFD) is often touted as a best practice, but many who have tried it have been disappointed in how slow and cumbersome it is. Expert shows clients how to get the benefit of QFD without suffering the delays that often accompany it. Another example is the fuzzy front end, an improvement opportunity that Expert and Reinertsen have been helping clients to exploit since the mid '80s, but others have only recently seen its potential.

Stage and gate development processes have become quite popular as managers look for ways to control their projects and ensure success. Unfortunately, such processes have their dark side when time to market is crucial. They force work into a sequential mode and constrain activities in a lockstep rhythm that is safe but not very fast. (And, Expert notes, it isn't even very safe when you can be left behind by a competitor.) Expert recognizes both the advantages and weaknesses of stage gate processes, and he helps clients to adapt them to their needs. Interestingly, since the objectives of each project are likely to differ, the best solution will also differ. Thus, the issue is not whether to use a gates approach, but how much of one to use on each project.

For instance, do you really want effort to cease at a gate, as the theory would suggest? Fortunately, there are powerful alternatives to stage gates that are being use effectively in object-oriented software development today. [See Expert's column, "Revisiting Iterative Product Development" in the September 1999 issue of Product Development Best Practices Report.] Because his multi-industry experience spans such fields as hardware and software, Expert can show clients how to transfer cutting-edge software techniques into the hardware world.

Expert identified opportunities in a client's development process and helped them implement improvements that ultimately earned them an international award for product development excellence (power tools industry).Working with senior management at one client, he discovered opportunities to speed up development and implemented some of these, including risk management and cost of delay (construction equipment business).He analyzed a client's product development capacity and advised them on how many projects they could undertake with their resources (medical devices industry). Expert facilitated and advised a corporate quality improvement team charged with accelerating the firm's product development. He helped to set up a multinational cross-functional development team (motor vehicles client).He restructured a client company's fuzzy front end process so that there was direct carry-through from quotation and planning to shipping the new product (semiconductor manufacturing equipment).

Education

Year Degree Subject Institution
Year: 1967 Degree: Ph.D. Subject: Engineering Mechanics Institution: Stanford University
Year: 1964 Degree: M.S. Subject: Mechanical Engineering Institution: University of Southern California
Year: 1963 Degree: B.S. Subject: Mechanical Engineering Institution: University of Southern California

Work History

Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1986 to Present Employer: Undisclosed Title: Principal Department:
Responsibilities:
Expert founded and operates a management consulting practice to accelerate new product development.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1984 to 1986 Employer: Emhart Corporation (PMW Black & Decker) Title: Manager Department: Corporate Technology
Responsibilities:
With Emhart, he developed and provided internal time-to-market consulting services.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1980 to 1984 Employer: Institute for Defense Analyses Title: Project Leader Department:
Responsibilities:
At IDA, Expert led and performed defense effectiveness studies.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1976 to 1980 Employer: Ensco, Inc. Title: Project Manager Department:
Responsibilities:
He led and performed transportation safety and engineering studies for this government transportation safety contractor.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1971 to 1976 Employer: General Motors Corporation Title: Group Leader Department: Research Laboratories
Responsibilities:
He analyzed and designed urban transportation systems.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1967 to 1971 Employer: Bell Laboratories (now Lucent Technologies) Title: Member Technical Staff Department: Bellcomm
Responsibilities:
He designed attitude control systems for manned spacecraft.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1964 to 1964 Employer: IBM Corporation Title: Engineer Department:
Responsibilities:
He wrote design automation software.
Years Employer Title Department
Years: 1963 to 1963 Employer: Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Title: Engineer Department:
Responsibilities:
He analyzed compressor, fan, and turbine blade vibrations.

International Experience

Years Country / Region Summary
Years: 2001 to 2001 Country / Region: Australia and New Zealand Summary: Expert was a featured speaker for a five-day, eight-city government-sponsored seminar series in Australia and New Zealand on time to market (cross-industry).
Years: 2001 to 2001 Country / Region: Mexico Summary: In Mexico, he facilitated a seven-nation development team start-up meeting and set up a product cost analysis system (for petrochemical equipment).
Years: 1994 to 1994 Country / Region: South Korea Summary: He trained senior managers in South Korea in the techniques of rapid product development (electronics and semiconductors business).
Years: 1992 to 1992 Country / Region: France Summary: Expert trained and helped set up a multinational development team in France (air conditioning equipment).

Career Accomplishments

Associations / Societies
Expert belongs to the Institute of Management Consultants (Certified Member), the Product Development and Management Association (PDMA), the Society of Concurrent Product Development (SCPD, formerly SOCE), and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME).
Licenses / Certifications
He is a Certified Management Consultant (CMC).
Professional Appointments
Expert has been appointed to the Advisory Board of the Society of Concurrent Product Development and the Editorial Advisory Board of Time Compression Technologies magazine.
Awards / Recognition
He is listed in Who's Who in the West and Who's Who in Finance and Industry.
Publications and Patents Summary
He is the coauthor of a product development book, numerous articles, columns, and interviews on product development.

Fields of Expertise

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