Article

The risk-progressive manufacturing strategy.

The best manufacturing route is rarely chosen in one jump. Most teams need a staged path that learns quickly first, validates repeatability second, and only then commits hard to scale.

Too many hardware teams frame the decision as prototype route versus final production route. In practice there is usually a more sensible sequence: prototype, bridge, and scale. Each phase is buying a different kind of confidence.

Useful framing: prototype manufacturing buys learning speed, bridge manufacturing buys evidence, and scaled manufacturing buys repeatable economics.

What each stage is for

StagePrimary goalMain risk if skipped
PrototypeLearn fast and change oftenTeams lock decisions before the design has earned it
BridgeTest demand, process capability, and quality repeatabilityScale investment arrives before the product proves itself
ScaleReduce recurring unit cost and increase throughputCapex gets committed against weak evidence or unstable geometry

What should trigger movement between stages

  • demand certainty improving, not just optimism increasing
  • product geometry stabilising enough that tooling changes are unlikely
  • quality requirements becoming clear and testable
  • the team being able to tolerate the lead time and capex of the next commitment

A product may appear ready for tooling because the cost curve is attractive, yet still benefit from a bridge run if the quality regime is immature or demand is not proven. That extra stage can prevent a much more expensive mistake.

The Production Strategy Planner is useful here because it connects volume, stability, quality, lead time, and capex posture in one staged recommendation.