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- FIR e. V. an der RWTH Aachen (57) (remove)
Das Ziel des Forschungsprojekts ToMiC war die Entwicklung einer Typologie zum lebenszyklusorientierten Management unternehmensinterner Communitys wissensintensiver Dienstleister. Jene befähigt insbesondere kleine und mittlere Unternehmen erstmals dazu, die aktuelle Lebensphase der eigenen Social-Software-basierten Community zu bestimmen. Die vorliegende Veröffentlichung ist der Abschlussbericht dieses Projekts.
Today, maintenance exceeds this definition, it is significantly more.
In many companies, it plays the role of an incubator for development
and drives digital transformation forward. The very essence of
Industrie 4.0 is the optimisation of the flow of information within as
well as outside of a company to accelerate the adjustment of company
organisations in the context of increasing competitive pressure.
Because of the variety of interfaces, information and data that
is available as well as its service character, maintenance lends itself easily as the area of choice for a company to make Industrie 4.0 real. Whilst doing so, the aim is not to equip employees with the
latest “gimmick“ for order processment or to be the company with
the highest number of lighthouse projects. Instead, maintenance
ensures reliable and cost-efficient production and, consequently,
the primary creation of added value of the manufacturing company.
Those who were identified as top performers during the “Smart
Maintenance“ consortium benchmarking by FIR at RWTH Aachen
University gain particular useful ideas twice as often as other follower companies directly from staff, thus releasing the right potential.
Information and data help to reach these goals and transfer the
vision of smart maintenance into actual pratice. But what is smart
maintenance exactly and how far along are you in the development
of your individual smart maintenance concept?
Today, however, agility is seen more than ever as a critical success factor for companies. In times of an increasing degree of digital interconnection and minimum viable products, a mentality is entering the industrial service sector that has so far only been exemplified by Internet companies (e.g. Google): New products and especially digital services are developed in highly iterative processes. To this end, customers are involved in early test phases of development and provide feedback on individual functional modules, which – in contrast to the previous approach – are only gradually assembled into a market-ready “100 percent version”. But especially with the development of new digital services, companies must ensure more than ever that both the existing analog service business and the design of new digital services are geared to effectiveness and efficiency in order to meet the growing demands of customers and competitors.
To achieve this, companies must not only be familiar with the products currently on the market, but also master the entire product history, which in some cases goes back more than 30 years and varies greatly from one industry to another.
This paper contributes to an assessment framework for valuing data as an asset. Particularly industrial manufacturers developing and delivering Smart Product Service Systems (Smart PSS) are comprehensively depended on the business value derived by processing data. However, there is a lack in a framework for capturing and comparing the Smart PSS data value with the purpose of increasing the accountability of data initiatives. Therefore a qualitative data value assessment approach was developed and specified on Smart PSS, based on an industrial case study research. [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-57997-5_39]
„Promovieren? Promovieren!" Mit diesem Slogan wirbt das FIR an der RWTH Aachen in seinen Stellenanzeigen für die industrienahe Promotion am Forschungsinstitut. Was junge Hochschulabsolvent:innen der Ingenieur- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften dazu motiviert, diesen Weg zu gehen, welche Erfahrungen sie am FIR machen und welche Perspektiven die Mitarbeit sowie die Promotion am FIR für ihre zukünftige Karriere eröffnet, beantworteten Dr. Jana Frank, ehemals Bereichsleiterin Dienstleistungsmanagement am FIR und heute 'Country Business Head' für Singapur und Malaysia bei der Henkel AG & Co. KGaA sowie Antoine Gaillard, seit Februar 2022 wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter des FIR an der RWTH Aachen im Bereich Produktionsmanagement.
This chapter addresses the market launch and sales of smart services. It opens with an introduction of the new challenges that the market launch of smart services creates for companies. Then follows the discussion of a four-phase approach to the market launch of smart services. Subsequently, successful practices are presented for this approach along eight design fields of the market launch. [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-58182-4_8]
Das FIR an der RWTH Aachen widmet sich gemeinsam mit dem Forschungskonsortium, bestehend aus dem Fraunhofer ILT, der DMG Mori Spare Parts GmbH, der Materialise GmbH, der TOP Mehrwert-Logistik GmbH und der Software AG, der Entwicklung einer unternehmensübergreifenden Softwareplattform zur Realisierung eines Wertschöpfungsnetzwerks für eine agile Logistiklösung zu Herstellung von Neu- und Ersatzteilen unter Nutzung der additiven Fertigung. Ziel ist die Entwicklung und prototypische Implementierung einer unternehmensübergreifenden softwarebasierten Plattform, die die zentralen Koordinationsfunktionen bereitstellt.
Many industrial companies face their digital transformation. In addition to an existing portfolio of products and services, new digital services are being developed to offer a portfolio of smart product service systems (Smart PSS). While the development of new digital services is rarely a problem for the companies, the organization of sales and distribution of Smart PSS in particular is a key issue. The sales of Smart PSS differs considerably from the sales of only products or services and must therefore be designed differently in order to meet customer requirements and successfully commercialize the developed Smart PSS. This paper therefore describes how the sales organization of Smart PSS should be designed successfully in various forms. The network thinking methodology is used in combination with a case study research approach to describe the connection between the offered portfolio, the customer requirements and the different elements of a sales organization. Furthermore, four different types of a sales organization for Smart PSS are described. This paper gives a recommendation for companies on a design of their sales organizations on which practical implications may be developed.
Smart Service Engineering
(2019)
In our digitalized economy, many traditional service engineering models lack flexibility, efficiency and adaptability. As today’s market differs significantly from the market of the late 20th century, service engineering models must meet different requirements today than they had to meet in the past. The present paper starts off by providing an overview of the requirements that modern service engineering models need to fulfill in order to succeed in today’s economic environment. Afterwards, three promising models that meet several of these requirements will be introduced.