Title: Managing Complex Product Development Projects
Apply: Apply online
Dates: Nov 11 - 12, 2009
Duration: A Two-Day Program for Senior Technical Managers

Program also offered on these dates:
March 22-23, 2010
July 14-15, 2010
November 10-11, 2010
Location: Cambridge, Massachusetts
Cost: $2,600 (excluding accommodations)
Brochure: Download the brochure
Schedule:Sample Program Agenda
Executive Certificate Track:Technology, Operations, and Value Chain Management

Description
Managing complex product development projects is a massive integration effort at many levels. Product and production plans must be integrated into components, components into subsystems, subsystems into systems and systems into quality products.

The traditional project management does not provide the kind of detail required today to both accelerate product development and improve product quality in the 21st century. Managing Complex Product Development Projects presents a revolutionary design structure matrix (DSM) that MIT researchers use to determine which tasks within each phase of a complex project should or should not be performed concurrently. The DSM method is already applied in a number of corporations.

MIT researchers developed the DSM modeling approach to learn how to solve problems facing large-scale projects. After field-testing DSM in dozens of organizations and industries around the world, they found that it successfully streamlined the development of a wide array of projects including:

  • complex automotive components systems and subsystems
  • aerospace configuration design
  • concept development and program roll-out
  • electronics and semi-conductor development
  • equipment and machine tool development
  • plant engineering
  • construction projects

Through lectures, exercises, interactive discussions, and teamwork, participants in the program learn how to use DSM to map complex design procedures into simple arrays. Most important, they learn how to solve four key problems that confound complex product development project management: iteration, overlapping tasks, architecture, decomposition and integration.

In Managing Complex Product Development Projects, participants learn to:

  • better document existing procedures
  • reduce complexity
  • share data with confidence
  • facilitate project flow
  • expose constraints and conflicts
  • design iteration strategically

Project Management Institute (PMI)
Participants in this program are eligible for 11 PDU credits from PMI. Provider ID: 2420. Course number: PD001.

The Participants
Managing Complex Product Development Projects is designed for senior managers involved in complex product development and project management as well as those responsible for speeding up the process of improving design procedures and designing and developing better products. These include:

  • vice presidents of engineering, manufacturing, and technology
  • directors of project management
  • product and business development
  • engineering and R&D program managers
  • chief project engineers
  • product design and process development engineers
  • technology strategists
  • project leaders

Faculty
Steven D. Eppinger, General Motors Leaders for Global Operations Chair and Professor of Management Science at the MIT Sloan School of Management, has a joint appointment in MIT's Engineering Systems Division. His research creates new approaches to improve complex product development processes. This work has been applied primarily in the automotive, electronics, aerospace, and equipment industries. Co-author of Product Design and Development, the primary text for this course, Eppinger lectures regularly for international corporations and in executive education programs and has consulted for or conducted research with more than fifty organizations. He has worked as a manufacturing engineer, product designer, and consultant in both prototype and production operations. 

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