The Total Cost of Ownership Score

Unifying Repair with Durability and Improving Objectivity, Completeness, and Scalability

Conference Paper (2024)
Author(s)

J. Faludi (TU Delft - Design for Sustainability)

Rutger Ritsma (Student TU Delft)

Bas Flipsen (TU Delft - Design for Sustainability)

Research Group
Design for Sustainability
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.23919/EGG62010.2024.10631233
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Design for Sustainability
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.@en
ISBN (electronic)
978-3-00-079330-1
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

This paper introduces the Total Cost of Ownership Score (TCOS) as a comprehensive framework for evaluating and improving product repair, durability, and maintenance all together on a uniform scale. The scoring procedure, implemented through a spreadsheet, calculates a product's total cost of ownership per year based on likelihood of failure modes, repair costs per failure (parts, labor, and other), likelihoods of repair successes, and cost of replacing the product if repairs fail. Because costs and repair times vary substantially based on many factors, and likelihoods of device failures and repair successes are stochastic by nature, the uncertainties are large and must be displayed in final scores. However, preliminary results indicate that even with large uncertainties, the TCOS provides meaningful product comparisons and hotspot identification. The advantages of the TCOS include scoring quantitatively in units that both consumers and businesses understand and value, to drive market behavior; vast reduction of subjective judgments in scoring; measuring durability and repair on the same scale; universal applicability, enabling legislation or policy to scale across products easier; and enabling legislation to allow innovation rather than prescribing designs. The TCOS's two challenges are that the data required is not publicly available for most products, so it requires empirical product testing; and further development / negotiation is required to decide what standard assumptions can be applied as shortcuts to shrink the scope of empirical testing.

Files

The_Total_Cost_of_Ownership_Sc... (pdf)
(pdf | 1.03 Mb)
- Embargo expired in 22-02-2025
License info not available