Griffin,
Abbie and John R. Hauser (1992), "Patterns of Communication Among
Marketing, Engineering, and Manufacturing -- A Comparison between
Two New Product Teams," Management Science, vol. 38, No.
3, (March), 360-373.
Models and
scientific evidence suggest that firms are more successful at
new-product development if there is greater communication among
marketing, engineering, and manufacturing. This paper examines
communication patterns for two matched product-development teams
where the key difference between the groups is that one used
a phase-review development process and the other used Quality
Function Deployment (QFD), a product-development process adopted
recently at over 100 United States and Japanese firms. To our
knowledge, this is the first head-to-head comparison of traditional
U.S. product development processes with QFD.
Our data
suggest that QFD enhances communication levels within the core
team (marketing, engineering, manufacturing). QFD changes communication
patterns from "up-over-down" flows through management to more
horizontal routes where core team members communicate directly
with one another. On the other hand, the QFD team communicates
less on planning information and less with members of the firm
external to the team. If this paucity of external communication
means that the team has the information it needs for product
development, and the QFD process has provided an effective means
for moving the information through the team, it is a positive
impact of QFD. If the result means that QFD induces team insularity,
even when the team needs to reach out to external information
sources, it is a cause for concern.