A.It is collection of generally sequential, non-overlapping product phaseB.The last product life cycle phase for a product is generally the product’s deterioration and deatC.Generally, a project life cycle is contained within one or more product life cycleD...
Google Share on Facebook product life-cycle [¦präd·əkt ′līf‚sī·kəl] (industrial engineering) All the phases, from conception and scale-up, through production, growing use, maturity, and obsolescence of a product. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Co...
3 myths about product life cycle assessmentsMikhail Davis
46. limited life, all have a life cycle. It is obvious that different products47. are last for different lengths of time but their life cycles have certain48. common in elements which can be described as the introduction, growth49. and maturity stages. The length of the product"s life ...
Often the extra expenditure is not accurately charged to the product and the result is that, long before unit sales are noticeably falling, the unit profit has already fallen. The product life cycle, then, presents a picture of what happened in the product's 'lifetime', so how can this ...
All of the following are true about the product life cycle EXCEPT:A.It is collection of generally sequential, non-overlapping product phaseB.The last product life cycle phase for a product is generally the product’s deterioration and deatC.Generally, a
The article holds that the theory of a product's life cycle refers to the process of change of a certain industrial product from prosperity to decline in the international market because of the loss of monopoly technically. The basic reason of the loss of monopoly is that any industrial produc...
The following statements have been made about life cycle costing: (1) Clean up costs should be included when assessing the profitability of a product (2) It is useful for organisations that develop products with a relatively short life Which of the above statements is/are correct? A. 1 onl...
Life-cycle analysis The assessment of a product’s full environmental costs, from raw material to final disposal, in terms of its extraction costs, transportation, manufacturing, consumption, use, and disposal throughout its lifetime. Life-cycle analysis is used as a tool for evaluating the ...
Life cycle costing does not have as an objective the maximisation of the commercial life of new products. Costs are estimated on the basis of the expected life of a product. Life cycle costing is particularly suited to businesses that manufacture products with short life cycles and who have ...