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Building and Managing the Bill of Process to Streamline the Enterprise—An Emerging Technology-Enabled Systems Approach
Published in Harriet B. Nembhard, Elizabeth A. Cudney, Katherine M. Coperich, Emerging Frontiers in Industrial and Systems Engineering, 2019
Within the PLM lives the manufacturing process management (MPM) system. The objective of MPM is to define the process, manage multiple versions of it (i.e., prior versions, active versions, and future planned alternates), and export the “Active” process with Effectivity attributes (i.e., serialized, version, or platform) to MES and PLM systems for Execution. Figure 8.7 shows the data flow within an MPM system.
PLM Components
Published in Uthayan Elangovan, Product Lifecycle Management (PLM), 2020
Manufacturing process management (MPM) defines a concept of applying enterprise business process management tools to the locations of factory and supply chain activity administration within and across the comprehensive venture. Product structure manages eBOM, whereas MPM integrates eBOM with bill of process (BOP) or mBOM.
Knowledge-based platform for traceability and simulation monitoring applied to design of experiments process: an open source architecture
Published in Journal of Engineering Design, 2019
Farouk Belkadi, Julien Le Duigou, Luca Dall’Olio, Gilles Besombes, Alain Bernard
SDM tools are associated to the so-called simulation lifecycle management (SLM) approaches, which are an adaptation of PLM approaches to simulation domain (CIMDATA 2011). Rather than a simple category of enterprise information system (IS), there is a consensus in industrial domain to consider the PLM as strategic approach that aims to implement in a consistent way a set of software and processes for the management of all product-related information through the entire lifecycle (Terzi 2010; Mesihovic, Malmqvist, and Pikosz 2004). The enterprise IS supporting the PLM approach results from the integration of EIS such as Product Data Management (PDM), CAD, CAE, Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM) and Manufacturing Process Management (MPM) (Schuh et al. 2008) among others.