Every organization has its strengths — and weaknesses. To emphasize the former while minimizing the latter, companies often devote considerable resources to their corporate strategies, for example, crafting the perfect plan to outmaneuver the competition in an emerging market. At the same time, those same companies may give short shrift to the essential task of determining exactly what their strategy for product innovation should be. The result: R&D projects that are out-of-synch with the rest of the organization.
Developing the right strategy for product innovation is hardly a simple matter. In fact, it is a complex undertaking that first requires a fundamental understanding of how technical modularity affects R&D efforts. In a modular design, a change in one component of a product (the heating element of a coffeemaker, for instance) has relatively little influence on the performance of other parts or the system as a whole. In a nonmodular, or “coupled,” design, the components are highly interdependent, and the result is nonlinear behavior: A minor change in one part can cause an unexpectedly huge difference in the functioning of the overall system. With semiconductors, for instance, a minuscule impurity (just 10 parts in a billion) can dramatically alter silicon’s resistance by a factor of more than 10,000. Generally speaking, modular designs make R&D more predictable, but they tend to result in incremental product improvements instead... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.
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