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ENGINEERING SERVICES ARTICLE Subscribe now to ensure you don't miss our articles Six Steps for a Successful OPD Engagement The importance of Outsourcing Product Design (OPD) and the inherent challenges in entering an emerging market continue to be discussed in multiple forums. Given the overwhelming benefits of OPD, engineering managers and business owners have come to firmly believe that outsourcing is the strategy for addressing some key business challenges. However, not many organizations have taken the next steps to develop the substantial benefits of OPD. Research has made it clear that most organizations have not had successful outsourcing engagements in the past. This is evident from the article titled “What causes outsourcing failures?” This article details nine principal causes of failure that are common across outsourcing. Upon closer analysis, it is evident that these apply to OPD as well. With over a decade of experience and expertise in handling product design projects coupled with a robust six-step OPD engagement process, we have demonstrated proven success to our customers. Our six-step OPD engagement process successfully addresses these nine causes of possible failure as explained below. Though this may sound obvious, but to ensure success, both the outsourcing organization and the OPD partner need to spend substantial quality time and energy during both the pre and post engagement stages. What to Outsource? Firstly, the outsourcing company should understand what part of their product design process can be outsourced. To decide this, the company should ideally complete an internal engineering assessment based on the product diversification strategy adopted for the entry into the emerging market.

Six steps for successful Outsourced Product Design engagement

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The importance of Outsourcing Product Design (OPD) and the inherent challenges in entering an emerging market continue to be discussed in multiple forums. Given the overwhelming benefits of OPD, engineering managers and business owners have come to firmly believe that outsourcing is the strategy for addressing some key business challenges.However, not many organizations have taken the next steps to develop the substantial benefits of OPD. Research has made it clear that most organizations have not had successful outsourcing engagements in the past.

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Page 1: Six steps for successful Outsourced Product Design engagement

ENGINEERING SERVICES ARTICLE

Subscribe now to ensure you don't miss our articles

Six Steps for a Successful OPD Engagement

The importance of Outsourcing Product Design (OPD) and the inherent challenges in entering an emerging market continue to be discussed in multiple forums. Given the overwhelming benefits of OPD, engineering managers and

business owners have come to firmly believe that outsourcing is the strategy for addressing some key business challenges.

However, not many organizations have taken the next steps to develop the substantial benefits of OPD. Research has

made it clear that most organizations have not had successful outsourcing engagements in the past.

This is evident from the article titled “What causes

outsourcing failures?” This article details nine principal causes

of failure that are common across outsourcing. Upon closer

analysis, it is evident that these apply to OPD as well.

With over a decade of experience and expertise in handling

product design projects coupled with a robust six-step OPD

engagement process, we have demonstrated proven success to

our customers.

Our six-step OPD engagement process successfully addresses

these nine causes of possible failure as explained below. Though

this may sound obvious, but to ensure success, both the

outsourcing organization and the OPD partner need to spend

substantial quality time and energy during both the pre and post engagement stages.

What to Outsource?

Firstly, the outsourcing company should understand what part of their product design process can be outsourced. To decide this, the company should ideally complete an internal engineering assessment based on the product diversification

strategy adopted for the entry into the emerging market.

Page 2: Six steps for successful Outsourced Product Design engagement

ENGINEERING SERVICES ARTICLE

Defining your Work

A well-defined Statement of Work (SoW) or Requirement for Proposal

(RFP) can reduce and eliminate many issues that crop up in an outsourcing engagement.

After deciding the project scope, the next step is to create a

requirements document involving all the relevant project stakeholders.

Discuss this requirements document in the light of the outsourcing partner’s proposal document. Does it match one-to-one? Does the

proposal explain clearly the project scope, key deliverables, schedule,

resource skills, training requirements, roles and responsibilities, and

cost terms adequately without any ambiguity?

At this juncture, both the companies should be aligned with respect to the project and commercial terms

Due-diligence

This step is critical to eliminate the risk of possible project failure. Take the time to check the following:

Did you define what the outsourcing company should do?

Do they have the capabilities outlined in the proposal?

Do they have the resources and experience as claimed?

This due diligence enables you to check if the scope of engagement needs to be further refined or the decision to continue

with the partner needs to be re-visited.

Contracting Phase

This phase is for both companies to contractually agree upon other essential obligations such as:

Who will own the patent for the product designed by the outsourced partner?

How will the outsourced partner protect my (outsourcing company’s) intellectual property rights (IPR)?

How do I handle product design concepts that are shared or leaked to my competitors?

What is the accountability at the partner end if there is a deadline slippage leading to product launch delay?

The outcome is a contractual agreement with a list of Service Level Agreements (SLA) with legal bindings including

penalty clause, force majeure, non-disclosure agreements, patent violation acts. This will enable you to safeguard your

company rights.

Transition Phase

Now that the ball is rolling, build project team counterparts at both the ends. Involve top management (project sponsors),

project leads and a project governance document comprising project execution process, project / knowledge transition

escalation matrix, documentation, configuration management, audit schedule, and contact information.

This step ensures the engagement is intact and limits possible communication gaps.

Page 3: Six steps for successful Outsourced Product Design engagement

Barry-Wehmiller International Resources 8020 Forsyth Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63105 (314) 862-8000

[email protected] www.bwir.com

ENGINEERING SERVICES ARTICLE

Managing and Reporting

The final step is the value realization step for the outsourcing company.

How rewarding has this engagement for their company?

How much value addition has this partner relationship done for me?

Can I measure value against reduced product lead time, optimum project costs, repeatability in quality, reduced project management time?

Does the partner have creative product design ideas as against the competition? Typically, the partner will be

working in house to come up with this data

The writer is an Outsourcing Product consultant who has helped companies design products for emerging markets like India. You can reach him at [email protected] for further assistance.

About Barry-Wehmiller International Resources

Barry-Wehmiller International Resources (BWIR) is a global provider of business and technology solutions to the mid -market manufacturing domain. With headquarters in St. Louis, MO., and global delivery operations strategically located to meet customer needs throughout the U.S., Europe, Southeast Asia and South America, BWIR offers world-class engineering services and enterprise

consulting solutions that enable its clients to achieve a competitive edge in their marketplace.

Vivek Maladkar

Head Business Development –Europe

Barry-Wehmiller International Resources Pvt. Ltd.

101 Lilac Grove | Nottingham, UK NG9 1PF

+44 (0) 115 967 8787 | DDI +44 (0) 115 907 9483 | fax +44 (0) 115 967 8707 Cell +44(0)7867 505 709

[email protected]

www.bwir.com