Product details

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Published by: Harvard Business Publishing
Originally published in: 1989
Version: 3 November 1988
Length: 34 pages
Data source: Field research

Abstract

Describes three different product development efforts at the Residential Controls division of Honeywell, Inc. Each of the three projects was for a different market and competitive environment. Each was tackled in a somewhat different way within the Honeywell Engineering organization, and the results from each were quite different. Also describes the new product development procedures that have been used historically at the Residential Division, and some of the current thinking regarding future changes in these procedures. Provides an opportunity to contrast the factors that impact success of product development across three quite different projects and to see how the organization''s approaches to product development impact the success in those varying environments. Also provides an opportunity for students to examine the engineering function and some of the key issues in managing that functional group. Finally, the path for changing the approaches to product development can be addressed, contrasting an incremental evolutionary approach to such procedures versus a complete replacement of those procedures by a new set.
Location:
Size:
Fortune 500, USD400 million sales a year
Other setting(s):
1986

About

Abstract

Describes three different product development efforts at the Residential Controls division of Honeywell, Inc. Each of the three projects was for a different market and competitive environment. Each was tackled in a somewhat different way within the Honeywell Engineering organization, and the results from each were quite different. Also describes the new product development procedures that have been used historically at the Residential Division, and some of the current thinking regarding future changes in these procedures. Provides an opportunity to contrast the factors that impact success of product development across three quite different projects and to see how the organization''s approaches to product development impact the success in those varying environments. Also provides an opportunity for students to examine the engineering function and some of the key issues in managing that functional group. Finally, the path for changing the approaches to product development can be addressed, contrasting an incremental evolutionary approach to such procedures versus a complete replacement of those procedures by a new set.

Settings

Location:
Size:
Fortune 500, USD400 million sales a year
Other setting(s):
1986

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