Japanese design and development

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177 pages 1997

About This Book

This timely book explores the influences and pressures which characterize Japanese companies and examines the way in which some of the best known are refocusing their development processes to improve input into, and management of, the early stages so that the products succeed across the whole range of available markets.

Detailed case studies of Toyota, Rover/Honda, Canon, NEC, Sharp and Okamoto are used to illustrate the benefits of leading Japanese companies' approach to design and development at both strategic and operational levels. The authors also take a penetrating look at Japanese management culture and its effect on product development. They conclude that Western companies still have much to gain from adopting certain traditional Japanese techniques.

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