Title :
Analyzing Product Architecture Under Technological Change: Modular Upgradeability Tradeoffs
Author :
Kamrad, B. ; Schmidt, G.M. ; Ulku, Sezer
Author_Institution :
McDonough Sch. of Bus., Georgetown Univ., Washington, DC, USA
Abstract :
A modularly upgradeable product allows customers to keep pace with technology by replacing modules instead of updating the entire unit, thus minimizing development and production costs for the firm. Despite these advantages, seemingly few consumer products are modularly upgradable (rather they are integral from the users´ perspective). To offer possible explanations, and help guide firms in enhancing the relative attractiveness of modularity, we develop an economic model where the firm´s frequency of product introduction and the end-users´ frequency of upgrades are endogenous. We characterize the firm´s introduction decisions under 1) an integral upgrade strategy, where the entire product is newly designed each generation, and 2) a modular upgrade strategy, where individually upgraded components are offered. We find that, contrary to intuition, the value of modularity diminishes with the overall rate of innovation in component technologies. On the other hand, the value of modularity increases with the difference in the rates of improvement between components, and increases when customers are more technically sophisticated, when production costs are high, and when the performance loss due to modularization is low.
Keywords :
consumer products; costing; industrial economics; innovation management; organisational aspects; product design; product development; technology management; consumer product; customer; economic model; end-user upgrade frequency; firm introduction decision; innovation; integral upgrade strategy; modular upgrade strategy; modular upgradeability tradeoff; modularly upgradeable product; product architecture; product design; product development; product introduction; production cost; technological change; Computer architecture; Hardware; Pricing; Production; Software; Tablet computers; Technological innovation; Modular-in-use; modularity; modularly upgradeable; product architecture;
Journal_Title :
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TEM.2012.2211362