What to Consider When Constructing Your 2024 Design Budget
Bringing a product idea to life is an exciting journey for any business. We’ve experienced the enthusiasm firsthand that comes with envisioning a new product and bringing its development to market. We also understand the daunting and complex reality between the first lightbulb moment and the final result. It's important to properly estimate the time, care, and budget needed to turn your vision into a finished product on store shelves.
Allocating too little to certain phases of design and development could derail your entire project. But invest wisely in key stages and you greatly increase your chances of launching a successful, profit-driving product.
So how do you know where to allocate those precious budget dollars? How much should you spend on industrial design versus engineering versus prototyping? Planning isn't the most glamorous part of the process, but proper budgeting sets you up for a winning product.
Market Research and Discovery (10%)
Before you even begin designing a product, you need to understand the competitive landscape and your target customers' needs. After all, even the best-designed product is futile if consumers aren’t excited about it. By dedicating 10% of your budget to market research, you’ll jumpstart your project on the right foot. This stage should include:
Extensive market research ensures you design something users truly want. It also reduces risk substantially by giving you abundant data to support design decisions
Brainstorming and Concept Exploration (20%)
The conceptualization phase is all about generating ideas and exploring possibilities before honing in on a design direction. This stage should account for about 20% of your budget and include the following key steps:
Taking ample time for creative exploration prevents you from locking in on a single idea too early. The goal is to explore a broad range of possible solutions before narrowing your focus.
Computer-Aided Design (CAD) and Breadboard Development (25%)
Roughly 25% of your design budget should go toward creating digital and physical concept models during the computer-aided design (CAD) and breadboard development phase. The steps you can’t miss in this stage are:
Investing in iterative prototyping reduces errors and avoids costly redesigns late in the process when changes become a bigger headache. By validating your design extensively at this step, you can head into the next phase with confidence.
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Engineering & Design for Manufacturing (DFM) (25%)
Thorough engineering on the front end is crucial to ensure your product passes manufacturing validations and quality checks. Because it sets your product up for efficient production and reduces the risk of defects down the line, it’s important not to cut corners. Allocate 25% of your budget to Engineering and DFM for the following steps:
Investing in thorough engineering on the front end sets your product up to meet quality and performance standards. Proper budgeting for engineering ensures your product can successfully transition from prototype to production.
Unsure how to validate your design? Email info@beyonddesign.com and together we’ll strategize to uncover flaws early.
Documentation and Prototype Models (20%)
The final 20% of your budget should go towards comprehensive documentation and higher-fidelity prototypes as you finalize the design. Be sure you account for:
Investing in robust product documentation and alpha prototypes will help ensure alignment and communication with manufacturers. This is your last chance for design tweaks before tooling and production.
Partner with Experts For Your Product Design (100%)
By breaking down your budget appropriately throughout the design process, you can allocate suitable resources for each stage without overextending.
The process doesn't end once your product is fully designed, either. Additional investments need to be made in regulatory compliance, factory tooling and programming, production planning, marketing initiatives, and distribution logistics to get your product to market successfully. However, few companies have all this expertise in-house.
That's where an experienced product design firm like Beyond Design can add value. Our team guides you through the development process from day 1 through production and beyond.
If you have questions about budgeting and planning for your next project, let's talk! Email us at info@startbeyond.com today to start a conversation. We exist to bring great ideas like yours to life!