Search for dissertations about: "industry maturity"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 45 swedish dissertations containing the words industry maturity.
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6. Digitalization as Facilitator of Effective Information Sharing in Production Systems
Abstract : This thesis aims to formulate strategic approaches to digital transformation, which manufacturing companies can apply to make themselves more effective in disseminating and presenting production-related information to shop-floor operators. Therefore, two approaches are proposed. READ MORE
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7. Value assessment capabilities in early PSS development : a study in the aerospace industry
Abstract : Providing added value to standalone products by adding services is at the core of product service systems (PSS) offered in manufacturing industries. Providing PSS requires a change not only in the way products are sold, but also in the way they are designed and developed. READ MORE
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8. The value of information sharing in automotive supply chains: Understanding the role of information utilisation for operations planning and control
Abstract : The purpose of the thesis is to provide knowledge about the role of information utilisation in suppliers’ operations planning and control (OPC) processes, for generating value of shared demand-related information in automotive supply chains. To do so, the thesis focuses on information utilisation from three different perspectives: (1) how suppliers utilise shared information; (2) why they utilise the information the way they do; and (3) the effect of the utilisation. READ MORE
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9. Partial carbon capture – an opportunity to decarbonize primary steelmaking
Abstract : Climate change requires that all energy-related sectors drastically reduce their greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). To have a high likelihood of limiting global warming to 1.5°C, large-scale mitigation of GHG has to start being implemented and cause emissions to fall well before Year 2030. READ MORE
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10. Facilitating Feature-Oriented Quality Assurance in Low-Maturity Variant-rich Systems
Abstract : Context: Many software systems exist in several variants customized for specific stakeholder requirements, such as different market segments or hardware constraints. This customization introduces a high level of complexity that renders traditional single-system quality assurance techniques inapplicable, since they need to consider variations and constraints between a system’s features—a. READ MORE