Notes Capsim
Notes Capsim
R&D
Every year, the market segments are gradually
drifting down and to the right across the perceptual
map as customer demands continue to evolve.
Your product will be produced and sold at the old
coordinates prior to the revision date.
If the project took until December 31st of this year it
would cost the company 1 million dollars. A six
month project would cost 500 thousand. A three
month project would cost 250 thousand. etc
New Mean Time Before Failure specification. MTBF
predicts reliability. It indicates the average number of
hours your product will operate before it fails. Higher
reliability implies higher material costs to build your
product.
The Industry Conditions Report has the drift rate for
each market segment in table 1 to help you plan your
R&D decisions. These drift rates are how fast each
market segment is moving across the perceptual
map.
In summary, to reposition a product you would do the
following: Research current customer buying criteria
in the Courier report. Display the R&D worksheet.
Adjust Performance, Size, & MTBF. Observe impacts
upon age, material costs, and R&D completion dates.
Save the decisions.
Marketing:
It is important to remember that each market
segment has a different price range. Remember that
what you see in your reports is last years price range
for each market segment. This years price range will
be 50 cents less than what you see in your reports.
There is a penalty for pricing your product above the
price range for this year. Every dollar above the price
range will lose 20% demand for your product. At
$5.00 above the price range, demand will fall to zero.
Keep in mind that the benchmark prediction is not
accurate, but if the projection increases it does
indicate that this decision would typically result in
Production line
Review the production analysis on page 4 of your
reports before making decisions in the production
department during the real simulation. This is also a
great place to keep an eye on what your competitors
are up too.
How much production you can schedule for a product
depends on your production capacity.
A sales forecast has been provided by the marketing
department for each of your products. This forecast
should represent the companys worst-case scenario.
( marketing )
It is okay to produce more units than you are
forecasting to sell. The number of units you produce
for a product should represent your best case
scenario. An extra month or two worth of sales is a
reasonable best case scenario.
For the actual simulation, you need to remember to
factor in any inventory on hand when you are
determining how many units to produce for each
product this year.
The production after adjustment is what you will
actually produce based on your production schedule.
Your companys A/P policy will determine the size of
the adjustment. The longer you make your supplier
wait for payment, the greater the adjustment will
become.