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Tech & Operations Management- Mass Customisation Lecture Notes, Reading List Book Summaries and Essay Plans

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Detailed notes, including lecture notes, reading list book summaries and essay plans for the Oxford University FHS Technology & Operations Management course's section on Mass Customisation (Week 6 of the course).










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Mass Customisation

Definition
 Ahlstrom & Westbrook (1999): Production of items for individual customers at a speed,
quality and cost associated with mass production
 Boynton, Victor & Pine (1993): Mass customisation exploits product structures where
there is component modularity within a common product architecture and achieves a
batch size of 1
 Boynton, Victor & Pine (1993): Mass customisation eliminates waste from the
customer’s perspective
 Not merely making operational adjustments for specific orders but developing a process
which can supply very numerous customer-chosen variations on every order with little
lead time or cost penalty
o Customers are integrated in the value creation process of the manufacturer
 Otherwise manufacturer unable to fill each individualised product
demand
 Piller (2008): Over the last decade, mass customization has emerged as an effective
approach for tackling precisely this task.

Examples

Successful Examples
 NikeID, Myvirtualmodel.com, Zazzle, Germany’s Mymuesli customised cereal, BMW
MINI
 Piller (2008): 26% of managers in a 2007 study sat that customised demands will
increase by 25-50% in next 2 years
o 67% of build-to-order manufactures has capability to calculate cost to produce
customised products

Failed Examples
 Levi’s custom jeans, Wild Things Design Your Own?, Shoesofprey

Reasons for Mass Customisation

Ogawa & Piller (2006): Market research doesn’t work because:
 Tests with a few consumers not a reliable predictor
 Focus groups not given realistic products to experience
 Don’t measure people’s real purchasing behaviour
 Test marketing is expensive, time-consuming and subject to noise from competing
organisations
 Background data needed to make accurate predictions, which is not available
 Many companies don’t use it
 Consumers may change their minds by the time the new product is launched
 People don’t really know what they want

Ogawa & Piller (2006): Motivation for mass customisation
 Customers have rapidly shifting fashions and preferences

, o Ahlstrom & Westbrook (1999): Customers are demanding an increased variety of
products
 Declining product life cycles
 Decreasing customer loyalty
 Escalating price competition
 High failure rates of new product introductions
 Poor understanding of customers’ needs

Benefits of Mass Customisation to the producer
 Early feedback on shifting customer preferences and fashions
 Ideas for new products E.g. Threadless example below.
 Less waste as producing exactly what consumers want, so no need to offload stock
through cut-price sales
 Build strong loyalty with customers which reduce costs of attracting new customers and
have word of mouth recommendations

Capabilities needed to deliver mass customisation
 Salvador et al (2009): A set of capabilities for aligning an organisation with its customers’
needs
o Ability to identify product attributes along which customer needs diverge
o Ability to reuse or recombine existing organisations and value-chain resources,
o Ability to help customers identify or build solutions to their own needs
 Support customers while they are making their choices
 Avoid complexity- Quality of user interface is part of the service offering
to the customer
 Reduce number of decisions at each point as too many options can be
overwhelming
 Fast cycle, trial and error decision-making between a set of options
 Research and investigate users' customisation processes
 Barman & Canizares (2015):
o Elicitation- Determining what the customers want or need
o Process Flexibility- E.g. modular design
 Piller (2008): Computer aided design (CAD) is the primary tool used to
support MC (92%)
o Logistics- Managing the availability and flow of raw materials, and delivery of
finished goods to customer
 Robust design process to ensure supply chain can cope with the enhanced variability so
need to use flexible automation and Process modularity, where one part of the process
is associated with one stream of products
 Salvador et al (2009): Difficult for organisations to achieve, but can lead to lasting
competitive advantages

Successful mass customisers build an integrated knowledge flow
 Builds up the company’s knowledge interface between manufacturer and customer is
crucial
 Need for dialogue between manufacturing & marketing is crucial: What can be done
must be an input to what marketing can offer

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