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Product Design Best Practices

50 Industry-Inspired Best Practices for Quality Products

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Product Design Best Practices – a compendium of 50 industry-inspired best practices for quality products. Written for design students and practitioners.

  • What are the design best practices?
  • What are the elements of a good design process?
  • How can I learn them?
  • What methods and tools are helpful?
  • How can I design quality products in the least time possible?
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The 50 Best Practices (BPs) are broken into 10 sections.
Click on a section for a list of Best Practices, then click on a Best Practice for details:

Introduction
To The Design
Process

  • Section 1.
    Introduction To Poduct
    Design Best Practices
  • Section 2.
    Design Process
    Fundamentals
  • Section 3.
    Develop
    Design Teams
  • BP
  • 1.1
Have a Good Appreciation for the Design Process. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Have a Good Appreciation for the Design Process. 

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • The design process is the managed structure of people’s knowledge so they can make the best possible design decisions, successfully fulfilling a need with objects.
  • Many different design processes are used.
  • Many factors make product design difficult.
  • The design process is highly recursive; there are usually tasks within tasks.
  • The design process is iterative, even in the most mature situations.

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  • Worksheet of Worksheets

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  • BP
  • 1.2
Focus The Design Effort On The Entire Product Life Cycle.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.2

Successful Product Development Organizations

Focus The Design Effort On The Entire Product Life Cycle.

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READING TIME

  • 13
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • The design process not only gives birth to a product but is responsible for its life and death.
  • Decisions made by designers affect virtually all the stages in a product’s life cycle.
  • There are four stages in a product’s life cycle: Design, Production and Delivery, Use, and End of Life.
  • The designer must address all four.
  • The Design stage is further broken into phases: Product Definition, Project Planning, Conceptual Design, and Product Development.
  • The Production and Delivery stage consists of Manufacture, Assemble, Distribute,and install.
  • A product is often designed for many different uses.
  • The end of life is usually a combination of the product being retired (taken out of use), then some combination of disassembly, disposal, recycling, or reuse.
  • Modern products are designed cradle-to-cradle.

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  • BP
  • 1.3
Focus on Function During Product Development. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.3

Successful Product Development Organizations

Focus on Function During Product Development. 

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READING TIME

  • 13
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • The design process not only gives birth to a product but is responsible for its life and death.
  • Decisions made by designers affect virtually all the stages in a product’s life cycle.
  • There are four stages in a product’s life cycle: Design, Production and Delivery, Use, and End of Life.
  • The designer must address all four.
  • The Design stage is further broken into phases: Product Definition, Project Planning, Conceptual Design, and Product Development.
  • The Production and Delivery stage consists of Manufacture, Assemble, Distribute, and Install.
  • A product is often designed for many different uses.
  • The end of life is usually a combination of the product being retired (taken out of use), then some combination of disassembly, disposal, recycling, or reuse.
  • Modern products are designed cradle-to-cradle.

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  • BP
  • 1.4
Consciously and Continuously Balance Product Cost, Development Time, and Quality. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.4

Successful Product Development Organizations

Consciously and Continuously Balance Product Cost, Development Time, and Quality. 

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READING TIME

  • 16
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Designers cost little but have a significant impact on product cost and quality.
  • Design decisions affect the cost of a product as much as the manufacturing processes used.
  • Product cost is committed early in the design process.
  • Product quality is designed into products.
  • Best practices help keep time, cost, and quality in balance.

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  • BP
  • 1.5
Develop Mechanical, Electronic, Software and Manufacturing Systems Concurrently. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.5

Successful Product Development Organizations

Develop Mechanical, Electronic, Software and Manufacturing Systems Concurrently. 

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READING TIME

  • 11
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Most modern products rely on mechanical, electronic, and software to make them function.
  • Mechatronic engineering is the simultaneous design of a product’s mechanical, electronic, and software elements.
  • No single person is an expert in all these fields; therefore, teams develop virtually all products.

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  • BP
  • 1.6
Use Design Tools to Support the Product and the Process. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.6

Successful Product Development Organizations

Use Design Tools to Support the Product and the Process. 

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READING TIME

  • 20
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • There are many types of tools that support product design: communication, planning, product lifecycle, CAD, performance analysis, human interface, AR and VR, information relationships, and measurement.
  • Tools take learning effort to be useful.

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  • BP
  • 1.7
Use Information Relationship Management Tools. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.7

Successful Product Development Organizations

Use Information Relationship Management Tools. 

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READING TIME

  • 23
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Mind Maps help develop relationships amongst people, objects, places, concepts, or events.
  • Affinity Diagrams are ideal for generating, organizing, and consolidating product or process information.
  • Flow Charts help organize anything that flows, such as information, energy, control, materials, task work, and data.
  • DSMs are used to determine the sequence of tasks or functions and to cluster items into work or structure modules.

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  • BP
  • 1.8
Develop and Leverage Societal and Technological Advances. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 1.8

Successful Product Development Organizations

Develop and Leverage Societal and Technological Advances. 

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READING TIME

  • 18
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Artificial intelligence, additive manufacturing, and internet communication are changing the design process in unforeseeable ways.
  • Design process tools and methods constantly evolve to utilize these new technologies, generating new best practices.

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  • BP
  • 2.1
Treat Design as a Learning Process. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 2.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Treat Design as a Learning Process. 

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Individual engineers, the team, and the organization learn throughout the design process.
  • Learning is a spiral, building on what was learned before.
  • Every action taken during the design process results in new knowledge about the product and process.
  • What is learned is reflected in the fidelity of the analytical and physical models.

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  • BP
  • 2.2
Value Documented Design Information. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 2.2

Successful Product Development Organizations

Value Documented Design Information. 

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READING TIME

  • 10
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design information ranges from sketches on paper to the hardware and software of the final product.
  • Information not documented is often lost to the individual and always lost to the organization.
  • Document all artifacts and decisions, as these are part of the organization’s intellectual property.
  • Documents need to capture what is in the engineers’ heads and communicate it to other engineers.

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  • BP
  • 2.3
Manage Information Uncertainty and Risk. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 2.3

Successful Product Development Organizations

Manage Information Uncertainty and Risk. 

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READING TIME

  • 16
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • VUCA is widely used to describe information uncertainty: VUCA = Volatile + Uncertain + Complex + Ambiguous.
  • Volatile information is changing and evolving. Uncertain information has a distribution about a mean.
  • Complex information causes change in unexpected places.
  • Ambiguous information is subject to each individual’s interpretation.
  • VUCA leaves out two additional forms of uncertainty: incomplete information and Black Swans.
  • Incomplete information is missing key data.
  • Black Swans are unforeseen events that have a significant effect on the product.
  • The combination of all forms of uncertainty is referred to as VUCA+.
  • Product and project risk is dependent on managing VUCA+.

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  • BP
  • 2.4
Make Rational and Transparent Design Decisions. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 2.4

Successful Product Development Organizations

Make Rational and Transparent Design Decisions. 

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READING TIME

  • 32
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design is a series of interdependent decisions.
  • The activity of decision-making creates information and facilitates conversation and understanding.
  • ALL decisions have five essential parts: understand the issue, develop measures, generate alternatives, evaluate alternatives, and decide what to do next.
  • Addressing the basic decision-building blocks fosters learning.
  • ALL decisions are based on VUCA+ information.
  • Methods to help engineers make decisions include pro-con lists, pairwise comparisons, and decision matrices.
  • Successful organizations know when decisions are final.

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  • Decision Matrix Worksheet
  • Pairwise Comparison Worksheet
  • Pro-Con Worksheet

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  • BP
  • 3.1
Use Product-Centered Design Teams. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 3.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Use Product-Centered Design Teams. 

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READING TIME

  • 14
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • A team is a group in search of a common understanding. Successful teams have identifiable characteristics.
  • Simple team building activities can set the pattern for team success.
  • Often, teams are part of a hierarchy of teams. It is helpful to have a team contract.

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  • Team Meeting Minutes Worksheet

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  • BP
  • 3.2
Support Each Individual’s Roles, Expertise, Creativity, and Style. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 3.2

Successful Product Development Organizations

Support Each Individual’s Roles, Expertise, Creativity, and Style. 

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READING TIME

  • 23
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • There are many roles on a design team, and successful organizations ensure that all the important ones are filled.
  • Engineers are on the team primarily for their expertise.
  • Successful organizations ensure that the right expertise is on the team.
  • Successful organizations foster creativity.
  • Each member of the team has their own problem-solving style.
  • Successful teams get the best out of all their members regardless of style.

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  • BP
  • 3.3
Ensure the teams have a work environment that fosters success. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 3.3

Successful Product Development Organizations

Ensure the teams have a work environment that fosters success. 

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READING TIME

  • 9
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • A good physical workspace can help a team be successful.
  • Engineers need a realistic workload without many distractions.
  • Successful organizations enfranchise their teams to make decisions.
  • The right tools help engineers to do their jobs effectively.
  • People work best in a positive company culture where everyone wants to contribute and do well.

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  • BP
  • 3.4
Maintain Good Team Health. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 3.4

Successful Product Development Organizations

Maintain Good Team Health. 

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READING TIME

  • 26
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Team health means getting the best from the team and the individuals.
  • Recognize the symptoms of poor team health and poor team member contribution.
  • Base remedies on a clear identification of the causes.
  • Use retrospection as a part of continuous design team improvement.

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Build
Understanding

  • Section 4.
    Building Problem
    Understanding
  • Section 5.
    Planning And Managing The
    Designing Process
  • BP
  • 4.1
Ensure They Understand the Design Problem.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Ensure They Understand the Design Problem.

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READING TIME

  • 15
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • There are many types of design problems.
  • Design problems focus on all levels of product granularity, from entire products to minor details.
  • Some problems depend on mature technologies, and others on those just evolving.
  • The process of addressing problem understanding is the same regardless of discipline, type, granularity, or maturity.
  • Work yet to be done on the design problem is managed in a Problem Backlog.

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  • Product Proposal Worksheet
  • Project Proposal Worksheet

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  • BP
  • 4.2
Keep the Stakeholders at the Forefront of the Project. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.2

Successful Product Development Organizations

Keep the Stakeholders at the Forefront of the Project. 

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READING TIME

  • 20
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • A stakeholder is a person or organization that interacts (directly or indirectly) with the object being designed.
  • Stakeholders are the main source of requirements.
  • The primary stakeholders are customers and users.
  • Two practical methods to find the stakeholders are Journey Maps and Stakeholder checklists.
  • Stakeholders may evolve and change their product needs.
  • Providing safety for the stakeholders is a key design responsibility.

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  • BP
  • 4.3
Work to Understand the Design Requirements. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.3

Successful Product Development Organizations

Work to Understand the Design Requirements. 

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READING TIME

  • 26
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design requirements are statements about what the stakeholders want.
  • There are many types of design requirements.
  • The stakeholders’ interaction with the object directly determines its perceived quality and, to a great degree, its salability and success in the marketplace.

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  • BP
  • 4.4
Use Many Methods to Develop Design Requirements. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.4

Successful Product Development Organizations

Use Many Methods to Develop Design Requirements. 

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READING TIME

  • 25
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • There are many methods used to develop design requirements.
  • Requirements need to be sufficiently developed and no further.
  • Requirements are not equally important to each stakeholder.
  • Requirements change over time (adding, deleting, decomposing, modifying), but only with review and care.

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  • BP
  • 4.5
Dissect Products to Gain Product Understanding and Find Market Opportunities. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.5

Successful Product Development Organizations

Dissect Products to Gain Product Understanding and Find Market Opportunities. 

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READING TIME

  • 21
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Organizations dissect competitors’ products to learn about them.
  • Product dissection is often called product decomposition or reverse engineering.
  • The goal of dissection is to identify the individual components, how they are manufactured and assembled, the interfaces between them, and their function, as well as find market opportunities.

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  • Product Decomposition Worksheet - Components
  • Product Decomposition Worksheet - Disassembly
  • Product Decomposition Worksheet - Function

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  • BP
  • 4.6
Develop Engineering Specifications That Measure the Design Requirements. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.6

Successful Product Development Organizations

Develop Engineering Specifications That Measure the Design Requirements. 

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READING TIME

  • 24
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Engineering specifications are refined customer requirements that are testable.
  • Engineering specifications are structured as (object) (measure) (units) (target) (threshold).
  • A fully refined problem backlog is composed entirely of specifications—only possible for very mature products.

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  • BP
  • 4.7
Use Quality Function Deployment (QFD) to Develop Problem Understanding. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 4.7

Successful Product Development Organizations

Use Quality Function Deployment (QFD) to Develop Problem Understanding. 

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READING TIME

  • 12
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • QFD is a major method for building problem understanding.
  • QFD is widely used in the automotive industry.
  • QFD integrates stakeholders, requirements, and specification development.

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  • BP
  • 5.1
Develop Test-Driven Design Tasks with Clear Deliverables. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 5.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Develop Test-Driven Design Tasks with Clear Deliverables. 

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READING TIME

  • 29
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Tasks describe what needs to be delivered (new information/knowledge) by each unit of work in the design process.
  • Test-driven development focuses task attention on the deliverables.
  • Each task must have a clear owner—without a single owner, no one is responsible.
  • Prototypes are developed to support task learning and testing.
  • It is important to design the tests to be "good enough for now."

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  • Task Short Form Worksheet
  • Prototype Proposal Worksheet
  • Task Worksheet

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  • BP
  • 5.2
Enable Teams to Make Realistic Task Estimates. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 5.2

Successful Product Development Organizations

Enable Teams to Make Realistic Task Estimates. 

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READING TIME

  • 22
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Engineers need to estimate the resources needed for projects.
  • There are many methods to make estimates.
  • All estimates are inaccurate—they are uncertain forecasts.

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  • BP
  • 5.3
Manage Backlogs with a Planning Model.  
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 5.3

Successful Product Development Organizations

Manage Backlogs with a Planning Model.  

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READING TIME

  • 28
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Develop a plan to work on the most critical tasks first.
  • A plan is a proposed sequence of tasks to develop a product that meets the design requirements and specifications.
  • Linear design processes with a rigid sequence of tasks are best used for well-understood tasks.
  • An Agile process provides a loose structure for the tasks and is best used for poorly understood and under-defined tasks.
  • The design process followed in industry is often a mix of linear and agile.
  • Too much planning leads to waste; too little planning leads to chaos.
  • Successful organizations document the processes that work for them so they can be repeated consistently.

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  • Task Ranking Worksheet

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  • BP
  • 5.4
Design the Task Plan for Each Project. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 5.4

Successful Product Development Organizations

Design the Task Plan for Each Project. 

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Projects are managed with a combination of Gantt charts and Kanban boards.
  • Too much planning leads to waste; too little leads to chaos.
  • Successful organizations document the processes that work for them so they can be repeated consistently.
  • Plans are intended to be modified, updated, and extended.
  • Change due to learning is good; reworking (fixing a mistake) is bad.

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  • BP
  • 5.5
Make Design Reviews Part of  Product Development. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 5.5

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Make Design Reviews Part of  Product Development. 

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READING TIME

  • 28
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design reviews are part of learning.
  • Frequent small reviews are much more useful than occasional large reviews.
  • Frequent small reviews ensure work is not conflicting or duplicated by different people.

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Generate
Concepts

  • Section 6.
    Alternative Generation
  • BP
  • 6.1
Systematically Generate Alternative Options.
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  • 6.1

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Systematically Generate Alternative Options.

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Problem or subproblem options can be generated using the same methods.
  • Generating many ideas helps avoid premature design fixation.
  • Generating many ideas helps in exploring the option space.
  • Using systematic methods increases the likelihood of developing promising ideas.

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  • BP
  • 6.2
Develop and Explore Multiple Concepts in Parallel. 
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  • 6.2

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Develop and Explore Multiple Concepts in Parallel. 

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • All design problems have many different answers.
  • Generating many varied ideas builds confidence in the final developed solution.
  • To create parallel concepts using set-based or dark horse design approaches.
  • To use concepts to generate new understanding of the requirements and specifications.

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  • BP
  • 6.3
Design from Known Stable Interfaces. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 6.3

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Design from Known Stable Interfaces. 

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READING TIME

  • 18
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Most products have many of their components grouped into modules—functional entities.
  • Modules physically and functionally interact at their interfaces.
  • Designing fixed, stable interfaces allows for the independence of modules and better products.

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  • BP
  • 6.4
Develop Function Models. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 6.4

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Develop Function Models. 

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READING TIME

  • 16
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Function modeling sets the foundation for the development of form and code.
  • Function primarily happens at interfaces.
  • Systems and the assemblies, components, and code that make them function are usually designed from interfaces—from the outside in.
  • The activity of function modeling extracts new requirements, affords comparison of optional configurations, and provides a foundation for transforming to hardware and software.

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  • BP
  • 6.5
Refine Concepts into Simple, Viable Products. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 6.5

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Refine Concepts into Simple, Viable Products. 

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READING TIME

  • 31
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Function drives interfaces while interfaces drive the form of components and assemblies.
  • Design is like peeling an onion, working from the outside inward.
  • Refining a product requires iteration for continuous improvement of performance.
  • During iteration, there is a significant difference between refining and patching.
  • Safety must be designed into a product. Design work is only as good as what the documentation captures.

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  • BP
  • 6.6
Systematically Prune Alternatives.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 6.6

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Systematically Prune Alternatives.

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READING TIME

  • 21
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Alternatives should be pruned, not selected. Pruning methods foster discussion, learning, and decisions.
  • Engineers make decisions with methods that support the decision-making process.

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Evaluate
Concepts

  • Section 7.
    Uncertainty Evaluation And
    Management
  • Section 8.
    Evaluate For
    Performance
  • Section 9.
    Product
    Evaluation For X
  • BP
  • 7.1
Assess Each Technology’s Readiness. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 7.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

Assess Each Technology’s Readiness. 

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READING TIME

  • 15
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Every technology used in a product has a "readiness," a measure of how easily it can be integrated into the product.
  • Successful organizations are aware of the readiness of each technology proposed and used.
  • The assessment process yields much information about the state of product development and provides a structure for communication.

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  • BP
  • 7.2
Begin Risk Assessment During Conceptual Design. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 7.2

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Begin Risk Assessment During Conceptual Design. 

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READING TIME

  • 17
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Risk is the likelihood of something happening times its consequence.
  • Risk is caused by uncertainty and thus cannot be fully mitigated.
  • Designers need to be aware of product, project, and decision risks so they know what to spend time addressing.
  • A product failure can result from poor risk management during the design process.
  • Product liability is the area of law where organizations and individuals are held responsible for product failures.

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  • BP
  • 7.3
Use the Factor of Safety and Margins as Design Variables. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 7.3

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Use the Factor of Safety and Margins as Design Variables. 

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READING TIME

  • 20
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Factors of safety and margins account for uncertainty during design to reduce product risk or give room for growth.
  • A factor of safety is the ratio of what is allowed to what is applied.
  • Margins are the difference between the allowed and the applied and are equal to the factor of safety minus one.
  • Factors of safety and margins are commonly used in mechanical design, and margins are used in electrical engineering and computer science.

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  • BP
  • 7.4
Develop Tolerances Consistent with Needed Function, Fit, and Manufacturing Methods. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 7.4

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Develop Tolerances Consistent with Needed Function, Fit, and Manufacturing Methods. 

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READING TIME

  • 26
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Costs generally increase exponentially with tighter tolerances on mechanical and electronic components.
  • In mechanical assemblies and electronic circuits, tolerances stack up to affect fit and function.
  • There are three ways to calculate stack-up: additive (worst case), statistical, and Monte Carlo.

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  • BP
  • 8.1
Have a Clear Performance Evaluation and Optimization Plan.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 8.1

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Have a Clear Performance Evaluation and Optimization Plan.

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READING TIME

  • 33
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Evaluation determines how well a concept works and guides its optimization. Evaluation is the culmination of Test-Driven Development (TDD).
  • Since the design specifications' targets and thresholds are numerical values, TDD requires the product to be refined sufficiently to make numerical comparisons to them physically or analytically.
  • Care must be taken with analysis tools: the results are only as good as the user’s knowledge of the tools, the values input, and the underlying physics.

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  • BP
  • 8.2
Optimize their products to Improve Performance. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 8.2

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Optimize their products to Improve Performance. 

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READING TIME

  • 12
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Sensitivity analysis is one technique for managing trade-offs and improving performance.
  • Trade-offs are used to identify the most balanced technical solutions among a set of proposed viable solutions.
  • During design, “optimization” usually refers to the informal methodology used to make a system as effective as possible.
  • It is seldom possible to use formal mathematical procedures (such as finding the maximum of a function).

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  • BP
  • 8.3
Use Design of Experiments (DOE) to Support Product Development.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 8.3

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Use Design of Experiments (DOE) to Support Product Development.

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READING TIME

  • 30
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design of Experiments (DOE) methods can be used to understand the effect of variables on the key performance indicators (KPIs).
  • DOE is a powerful design optimization method.
  • DOE is both the exploration of the design space and is used to find “nominal-is-best,” “more-is-better,” or “less-is-better” performance for KPIs.
  • DOE “experiments” can be physical or analytical.
  • DOE makes use of the Analysis of Means (ANOM).

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  • BP
  • 8.4
Develop Robust Products. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 8.4

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Develop Robust Products. 

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READING TIME

  • 23
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • A robust design is insensitive to noise.
  • Noise is what the designer cannot or chooses not to control.
  • Noise is uncertainty typically caused by manufacturing variations, use, aging, and environmental conditions.
  • Uncertainty due to noise makes the design space fuzzy.
  • Robustness can be designed into products.
  • Design of Experiments (DOE) methods can be extended to produce robust designs.
  • The "experiments" can be physical or analytical.

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  • BP
  • 9.1
Design for Cost. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.1

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Design for Cost. 

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READING TIME

  • 32
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Cost requirements drive many products.
  • The cost of machined parts is a function of their size, tolerances, and the number to be produced.
  • Injection molded part cost is tied to the complexity of the mold.
  • Regardless of the manufacturing process, the cost usually decreases with volume, asymptotically approaching a fixed value.
  • The cost of additive-manufactured components is generally not very dependent on the quantity.
  • The cost of PCBs depends on the size, the number of layers, and the components.
  • The cost of code depends on its function or the number of lines of code.

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  • BP
  • 9.2
Design for Manufacture. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.2

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Design for Manufacture. 

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READING TIME

  • 13
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Injection molded parts need thin walls and features that allow them to be easily removed from molds.
  • Machined parts can get expensive as the features on them are increased.
  • Printed components can have intricate features and are suitable for low-volume production.
  • Printed circuit boards must be designed to support components and be easily mounted in physical structures.

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  • BP
  • 9.3
Design for Assembly. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.3

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Design for Assembly. 

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READING TIME

  • 33
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Design for Assembly evaluation is only important if assembly cost is a significant part of the product cost.
  • For hand, automatic, or robot assembly, thirteen DFA guidelines are used in industry to streamline assembly.
  • DFA guidelines include part retrieval, handling, and mating.
  • Estimating the time and cost of assembly is particularly challenging.

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  • BP
  • 9.4
Design for Reliability. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.4

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Design for Reliability. 

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READING TIME

  • 26
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • A reliable product has a low risk of failure.
  • Failure renders a component, assembly, or system incapable of performing its intended function.
  • Faulty Tree Analysis (FTA) is a method to discover failure events and their logical relationships.
  • The Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) is the average elapsed time between failures.
  • Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) is a quantitative method to analyze the risk of failure.
  • There are four avenues for risk mitigation: avoidance, reduction, transfer, and acceptance.
  • Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) is widely used to understand potential failures.

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  • BP
  • 9.5
Design for Test and Maintainability. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.5

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Design for Test and Maintainability. 

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READING TIME

  • 13
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Maintainability is the ease of replacing parts or assemblies.
  • The ability to test product function is a significant element of maintainability.
  • Test and maintainability are important for expensive consumer products and all industrial products.
  • In a throw-away society, there is little need for testing and maintaining many consumer products.

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  • BP
  • 9.6
Design for Sustainability. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 9.6

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Design for Sustainability. 

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READING TIME

  • 20
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • The Earth does not have a pollution problem; it has a design problem.
  • Most products end up in landfills.
  • Measuring a product’s greenness or sustainability is possible by developing a Design for Sustainability (DFS) score.

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Introduction
To The Design
Process

  • Section 10.
    Post Design Consideration
  • BP
  • 10.1
 Manage Product Change. 
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 10.1

Successful Product Development Organizations

 Manage Product Change. 

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READING TIME

  • 16
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • Product changes naturally occur during the design process.
  • Product changes occur after product release.
  • Product changes after release can be very costly.
  • Ongoing product change can be part of a design philosophy.

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  • BP
  • 10.2
Value and Manage Their Intellectual Property.
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  • BEST PRACTICE
  • 10.2

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Value and Manage Their Intellectual Property.

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READING TIME

  • 21
  • min

BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

  • All the ideas, analyses, and drawings are an organization’s intellectual property.
  • Organizations work hard to protect their trade secrets.
  • Unique ideas can be protected through patents.
  • Patents make ideas public. Patents reflect bets on unproved invention value.
  • Patents give bragging rights and a license to litigate.
  • The patent process is not difficult.

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  • BEST PRACTICE

Succesful Product Development Organizations

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BEST PRACTICE KEY CONCEPTS

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READING TEAM

  • min

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