Most chemical companies have more potential projects than they have time to work on. Fulfilling customer requirements as quickly as possible is key to capturing value from the market. This webinar explains how you can accelerate innovation in new process and product development.
By viewing this webinar, you will learn:
- Why developing new technologies in cutting edge industries is such a challenge
- Why design of experiments is critical if you want confidence in meeting development project milestones
- How you can extract valuable insight from your flood of manufacturing data
Speakers
Speaker: Stan Higgins, OBE
Former CEO of the North East of England Process Industries Cluster
After a 48-year process industry career, Stan Higgins, PhD, retired from his post as CEO of the North East of England Process Industries Cluster. In recognition of his role in catalysing the UK’s growth and expanding international influence on the chemical, biotech and renewables industries, Higgins was awarded an OBE in 2018. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and recipient of the lifetime achievement award from the Chemical Industries Association. Higgins currently acts as non-executive director of Industrial Technology Systems and is a senior adviser to Tradebe, an international leader in waste reclamation and recycling.
Speaker: Phil Kay
JMP Senior Systems Engineer, SAS
Robert Anderson is an enthusiastic DoE practitioner who worked for more than 25 years in the semiconductor industry in device and process engineering. He works for the JMP UK office from Glasgow, Scotland.
Robert has developed and delivered training on statistical methods and DoE to engineers and mentored them in process improvement, defect reduction and yield improvement methodologies.
Moderator: Benjamin Valsler
Digital Editor, Chemistry World
Ben Valsler is the digital editor of Chemistry World magazine, producing video and podcasts to accompany the magazine and website. Prior to joining the Royal Society of Chemistry, he was the producer of the award-winning Naked Scientists, making local and national radio programmes for the BBC, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Primedia in South Africa.