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Mass Customization and the Learning Curve Appendix 9A. Mass customization is the new trend of making products partially mass produced, and partially customized. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Slide 1
Mass Customization and the Learning Curve
Appendix 9A
• Mass customization is the new trend of making products partially mass produced, and partially customized.
• Land’s End sells mass produced clothing in catalogs and in stores such as Sears, but it also offers the service of stitching initials or names in shirts or duffle bags – this makes the product at the same time mass produced and customized.
• Economies offered in the mass production of items helps to offset the expense of individually designed products.
South-Western Publishing
Slide 2
Learning Curve Relationship
• “Learning by doing" has wide application in production processes.
• Workers and management become more efficient with experience.
• The cost of production declines as the accumulated past production, Q = qt, increases, where qt is the amount produced in the tth period, and Q is the accumulated past production.
• Airline manufacturing, ship building, and appliance manufacturing have demonstrated the learning curve effect.
Slide 3
• Functionally, the learning curve relationship can be written C = a·Qb, where C is the input cost of the Qth unit:
• Taking the (natural) logarithm of both sides, we get: log C = log a + b·log Q
• The coefficient b tells us the extent of the learning curve effect.» If the b = 0, then costs are at a constant level.» If b > 0, then costs rise in output, which is exactly
opposite of the learning curve effect.» If b < 0, then costs decline in output, as predicted by
the learning curve effect.
Slide 4
Example• Cookie Baskets, Inc., is a local firm that assembles gift baskets. This is a
one-owner, one-worker firm. Using data on time it takes to make the tenth, twentieth, and so forth baskets, the manager estimates the following regression.
Ln T = .4 - .02 • Q R2 = .834 N = 30
(3.1) (2.6)
where T is time it took to make a basket and Q is the accumulated number of baskets made, and the parentheses contain t-statistics.
Q: Is this firm finding any benefits of Learning by Doing?
A: Yes, the coefficient on Q is negative, so it takes less time to make baskets as the number of baskets made grows. The coefficient is statistically significant.
Slide 5
Percentage of Learning
• The proportion by which costs are reduced through DOUBLING output is estimated as follows:
L = (C2/C1)·100%» where C1 is the input or cost for the Q1 unit of output
and C2 is the input or cost for the Q2 unit of output (and Q2 = 2•Q1).
• If the percentage of learning, L = 82%, then input costs decline 18% as output doubles. » The percentage of learning is 100% - L.
• When L = 100%, there is no percentage of learning.