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Product managers are responsible for managing a company's product line on a day-to-day basis. As a result, product managers are critical in driving a company's growth, margins, and revenue. They are responsible for the business case, conceptualizing, planning, product development, product marketing, and delivering products to their target ...
Product analysis; Product breakdown structure; Product bundling; Product category volume; Product change notification; Product churning; Product cost management; Product differentiation; Product information management; Product life-cycle management (marketing) Product life-cycle theory; Product line extension; Product lining; Product literature ...
Software product management (sometimes referred to as digital product management or just product management depending on the context) is the discipline of building, implementing and managing digital products, taking into account life cycle, user interface and user experience design, use cases, and user audience.
MES may operate across multiple function areas, for example management of product definitions across the product life-cycle, resource scheduling, order execution and dispatch, production analysis and downtime management for overall equipment effectiveness (OEE), product quality, or materials track and trace. [2]
A product manager (PM) is a professional role that is responsible for the development of products for an organization, known as the practice of product management. Product managers own the product strategy behind a product (physical or digital), specify its functional requirements , and manage feature releases .
The core of PLM (product lifecycle management) is the creation and central management of all product data and the technology used to access this information and knowledge. PLM as a discipline emerged from tools such as CAD , CAM and PDM , but can be viewed as the integration of these tools with methods, people and the processes through all ...
Figure 4. Example of different business processes depending on configuration lifecycle management. Behind the seemingly simple process of configuring and ordering a configurable product, such as a car, lie several business processes of which configuration is an essential part:
Product family engineering makes it possible to create software for the different products and use variability to customize the software to each different mobile phone. The Nokia case is comparable with a normal software product line. During the first phase, product management, it is possible to define the scope of the different mobile-phone ...