From sashimi to zen-in : the evolution of concurrent engineering at Fuji Xerox
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概要
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This case study examines the evolution of R&D knowledge management at Japan's business equipment maker Fuji Xerox, from the sashimi system, a Japanese origin of concurrent engineering, to its successor zen-in system, which is composed mainly of a real high-tech discussion room equipped with databases that provide technical information and two 70-inch displays that shows virtual but real-size, three-dimensional graphic models. We found that Fuji Xerox has chosen the "hybridization strategy" that mixes human-based and IT-based knowledge-sharing techniques. We also argue that concurrent engineering provides not only efficiency benefits but also positive effects on group and organizational creativity. Finally we present a conceptual framework of "how concurrent engineering works", i.e. uncertainty and diversity necessitate concurrency which produces such benefits as efficiency and creativity, and which in turn realizes product integrity.
- Emerald Group Publishing Limitedの論文
- 2004-00-00
Emerald Group Publishing Limited | 論文
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