The Management Roundtable The Leading Practitioners' Resource for Product & Technology Development
92 Crescent Street . Waltham, MA 02453 . Tel: 800-338-2223 or 781-891-8080
Fax: 781-398-1889 . General Inquiries: info@roundtable.com
 

INSIDE MRT

MRTplus

Fast Track

MRT Event Calendar

MRT AudioSessions

Publications

Special Report on Managing Intellectual Property for Product & Technology Development
Special Report on RD&E and Innovation in China
Special Report on Lean Product Development Practices
Special Report on Open Innovation Practices
Roadmapping Implementation Kit
Metrics Handbook
Product Development Best Practices Report
The Critical Path - email newsletter
White Papers
Online Articles

About MRT

Register by mail
Join the
MRT Mailing List

Trends & Insights

Related Info

< Part I
An Interview with Don Reinertsen (2/2)
Obsessing About Best Practices and Doing it Right the First Time Can Hurt You - Part 2

PDBPR: You’re big on making an economic case for everything. Isn’t this already the universal practice in business? Where’s the news in what you’re saying?

DR: "It is often far more dangerous to do something incorrectly than to omit it. If you omit it, there’s a chance you may notice the omission and correct it. If you do it incorrectly, but believe you are doing it right, there’s little chance you’ll scrutinize what you do. This is the essence of the problem with how
people do economic analysis today. They typically leave out major factors like the cost of delay on the critical path, and they inevitably come to completely incorrect answers. Yet, they believe they already understand their economics.

"The very fact that people are willing to grasp onto ‘best practices’ illustrates how completely they have forgotten how to ask the question, ‘How do I make money by doing this?’ Instead, they are willing to adopt a practice, subjecting it to no economic scrutiny, solely on the basis that it is ‘best practice’. It appears that imitation has become more important than making money.

"If you don’t think this is true go to the typical development team and ask the team members to independently estimate the cost to shareholders of delaying their product introduction by three months. The answers will differ by at least an order of magnitude. This means that they are making vital decisions that affect the schedule and economics of the project while they are clueless about the economic consequences. And, even more seriously, it has not even occurred to their management that this might be a problem."

PDBPR: Many people seem hell-bent on looking to metrics for salvation. Yet it’s possible to measure your way into extinction. In the context of the well-disciplined design factory, what’s important to keep in mind about metrics?

DR: "Metrics are only a part of the control process, but a crucial one. To select the right metrics back up and ask: ‘Why are we trying to control the development process?’ I maintain that the sole purpose of control, and its companion, measurement, is to influence economic outcomes. We need to choose metrics based on the underlying economics of the process, which means different processes need to measure different things. I know a VP of Engineering who complained to me that his company let him make component decisions that cost millions of dollars a year with no oversight, but required him to get approval of his boss to remove a box of pencils from the storeroom. A great example of focusing control effort on a parameter that has trivial economic impact.

"I argue that there are sets of metrics that are directed at each of the four key economic objectives; we can systematically choose process and project metrics that actually are relevant. The measurement-to-extinction problem only occurs in two cases: when you focus your measurement effort on economically irrelevant parameters, and when you treat measurement as an end in itself instead of as a component of a closed-loop control system. What you do after you measure is as important as what you measure."

PDBPR: In Chapter 4 you make a statement that is sure to raise some eyebrows. You state that doing things right the first time may be the wrong approach. Why do you say this?

DR: "We already know how to do it right the first time: take no new risks.  As long as we always use a proven approach we have no risk of failure. But does this really produce winning designs? Unfortunately, we have to change the design to improve it. This requires risks. ‘Do it right the first time’ implies
that driving the probability of failure to zero will optimize economics. But this is not true. We make the most money when we take ‘rational’ risks. When the likely upside is larger than the likely downside. It is rational to bet a penny for a 50% chance of making a dollar—even though the risk of failure is high.

"Now let’s apply this to the design process. We frequently have a chance to try a new approach that has substantial possible benefits. If the benefits are high enough we want people to do this. In fact, if we never try anything new in our designs we will have 100% chance of ultimately having a working design that we can’t make money on. There is another way to view this problem, using information theory, that shows you that if you get your designs to work perfectly the first time, you have eliminated all information generation from your design process. In other words, you have created the perfect non-learning organization."

PDBPR: Use the right tools, you say. But isn’t this like "best practices" — no one right set of tools?

DR: "I like to use the tool analogy because most people instantly recognize that a screwdriver is a good tool for driving screws but a poor one for hammering nails. There is a right tool to use to accomplish a particular job in a particular setting. It would be silly to talk about the concept of a universal ‘best’ tool without asking the question, ‘To do what?’. Again, the danger in best practices is the notion that there is one best way to do things that would be best in all situations for all companies.

"Of course, to move beyond best practices we need some way to assess a situation to determine which tools are best in that situation. The tool we use to do this is the economic analysis described in Chapter 2 of the book. From this economic analysis you can determine what needs to be optimized about your project or process, which leads you to specific practices that can optimize those things."

PDBPR: In your book you invite readers to focus on organizational fit. Why?

DR: "Organization design is intimately entangled with process design. The book describes three basic organizational approaches: functional organizations, autonomous teams, and hybrid organizations and identifies when each is most appropriate. One is not always better. In general, functional organizations are good for expense control, autonomous teams for speed, and hybrid organizations for controlling product cost and performance. The real art of organizational design does not lie in how you draw the lines on the organization chart, but in the processes and communications links that you design to fill the ‘white space’. I have seen many beautiful-looking organization charts that didn’t work because management concluded they were organized because they had an organization chart."

PDBPR: Can you say a bit more about product team autonomy?

DR: "Autonomous teams will result in fast development, particularly when they’re resourced with everything they need to succeed. In reality, this rarely happens. Furthermore, the increase in speed may come at the expense of sub-optimizing other objectives, like performance, unit cost, and expenses.
You need to decide which factor has the greatest economic importance before you can select an approach. 

I recall the story of a Japanese video camera team that was totally autonomous. It did an amazingly fast development but produced a camera that could only be used by a right-handed person. Although they were fast, they clearly lost out by not being able to access organizational knowledge outside the team.

"For autonomy the devil is in the details. You rarely see situations where autonomy is an undifferentiated team property. Instead, what you see is a microstructure of activities; some delegated to the team, and some are retained outside of the team. Even the most autonomous team will usually not be given authority to choose their own CAD system. This has too many cross-project implications. Even the least autonomous team will be given authority to set task sequences for their project. 

"I find it much more useful to talk specifically about which authorities you will or will not give to the team rather than to make broad pronouncements about autonomy and empowerment. There is simply very little information content in the statement that the team is autonomous, because it tells you very little about the detail of how decisions will get made. The book identifies about forty key decision areas in which you must choose whether the team or someone outside the team should have authority."

PDBPR: You say that many companies don’t manage risk effectively in their development programs. Why?

DR: "Most companies act as if you can take any risk you want as long as you are successful. As I mentioned earlier, the basic defect in the way most people manage risk is that they think our objective is to minimize risk. Risk is viewed as bad. An economist would take a different perspective. Any decision to take a risk is a bet on an uncertain future. The rationality of that bet depends on what the upside is, what the downside is, and the chance of winning.

"We only want people to stop placing stupid bets. The problem today is that most companies have very poor processes to make these decisions. The book suggests structuring these decisions as economic tradeoffs."

This article originally appeared in the December 1997 issue of PDBPR


Join the MRT Mailing ListTo join our e-mail list and receive future updates on "Fast & Flexible" techniques, click here.

Reinertsenphoto.jpg (3912 bytes)ABOUT DON REINERTSEN
Don Reinertsen is President of Reinertsen & Associates, a consulting firm specializing in the management of product development. He is co-author of the book Developing Products in Half the Time: New Rules, New Tools and author of Managing the Design Factory. He can be reached by E-mail at DonReinertsen@compuserve.com

Learn more about
LEAN PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
from Don Reinertsen at our 2-Day intensive workshop:

Achieving Lean Product Development

February 16-17, 2004
San Diego
Attendance Limited

MORE INFO >

Related Articles:

  • "Creating a Fast and Flexible Process: Research suggests Keys to Success" - featuring Alan MacCormack...read article
  • "Fast and Flexible? Do It Wrong the First Time" - By Preston G. Smith...read article

 


© Copyright 2008 by Management Roundtable, Inc. All Rights Reserved