System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab

In November of 2012, a robotics research laboratory at a southeastern university began to work on a multi-million dollar robotics project to participate in a national level robotics competition. This project was led by a robotics lab referred to as the Southeastern Robotics Lab (SRL) in this report,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Holler, Joseph Robert Jr.
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47797
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-47797
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-477972020-09-29T05:46:28Z System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab Holler, Joseph Robert Jr. Mechanical Engineering Furukawa, Tomonari Lattimer, Brian Y. Woolsey, Craig A. Ghaffarzadegan, Navid System Dynamics Project Management Robotics In November of 2012, a robotics research laboratory at a southeastern university began to work on a multi-million dollar robotics project to participate in a national level robotics competition. This project was led by a robotics lab referred to as the Southeastern Robotics Lab (SRL) in this report, and included three additional partners from other research centers, corporations, and universities (referred as Partner A, Partner B and Partner C). While SRL is an experienced robotics laboratory which had performed successfully on various large scale robotics projects, the new project was managerially much more complex due to the involvement of several external organizations, the size of the project, availability of financial resources, and the strictness of the deadlines. The project failed to meet its desired outcome with the project team unable to field a completed system as intended at the end of the scope of work (13 months from project start to conclusion). The failure was an example of common shortcomings in multi-organizational innovative projects. Using the SRL case, we offer a simulation-supported explanation for why complex high-tech projects frequently fail. We gather data through interviewing several researchers directly involved in the project, and conduct textual analysis of archival data through the project. Then we build a system dynamics model of the system and conduct simulation-based analysis of the case. The study offers managerial implications for similar large scale projects. Master of Science 2014-05-06T08:00:28Z 2014-05-06T08:00:28Z 2014-05-05 Thesis vt_gsexam:2729 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47797 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic System Dynamics
Project Management
Robotics
spellingShingle System Dynamics
Project Management
Robotics
Holler, Joseph Robert Jr.
System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
description In November of 2012, a robotics research laboratory at a southeastern university began to work on a multi-million dollar robotics project to participate in a national level robotics competition. This project was led by a robotics lab referred to as the Southeastern Robotics Lab (SRL) in this report, and included three additional partners from other research centers, corporations, and universities (referred as Partner A, Partner B and Partner C). While SRL is an experienced robotics laboratory which had performed successfully on various large scale robotics projects, the new project was managerially much more complex due to the involvement of several external organizations, the size of the project, availability of financial resources, and the strictness of the deadlines. The project failed to meet its desired outcome with the project team unable to field a completed system as intended at the end of the scope of work (13 months from project start to conclusion). The failure was an example of common shortcomings in multi-organizational innovative projects. Using the SRL case, we offer a simulation-supported explanation for why complex high-tech projects frequently fail. We gather data through interviewing several researchers directly involved in the project, and conduct textual analysis of archival data through the project. Then we build a system dynamics model of the system and conduct simulation-based analysis of the case. The study offers managerial implications for similar large scale projects. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
Holler, Joseph Robert Jr.
author Holler, Joseph Robert Jr.
author_sort Holler, Joseph Robert Jr.
title System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
title_short System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
title_full System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
title_fullStr System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
title_full_unstemmed System Dynamics Analysis of the Growth and Management of a Graduate Robotics Lab
title_sort system dynamics analysis of the growth and management of a graduate robotics lab
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47797
work_keys_str_mv AT hollerjosephrobertjr systemdynamicsanalysisofthegrowthandmanagementofagraduateroboticslab
_version_ 1719346150674268160