OpEx Innovation and Design
For organizations where product development has a direct impact on operational and business performance. We support R&D teams, technology startups and scale-ups, as well as industrialization and production transfer teams that need to reduce risk quickly, implement innovation effectively, and ensure a smooth transition from concept to scalable production.
- Home
- Consulting services
- OpEx Innovation and Design
Designing product development that creates competitive advantage instead of future problems
Decisions made during product development have long-term consequences. More than anything else, they determine process stability, quality costs, susceptibility to variation, and the pace of future growth.
That is why OpEx Innovation & Design provides support for organizations that want to manage risk and development time deliberately at the stage where future problems are still being designed into the system.
When does it make sense?
This part is for you if:
- time to market is consistently increasing,
- the number of tests, prototypes, and iterations continues to grow, yet decisions are still made with limited knowledge,
- problems only become visible during industrialization, production, or after market launch.
Why does this happen?
- tests are conducted simply because "that is how it is done",
- prototypes do not generate new decision-relevant knowledge,
- iterations do not lead to a meaningful reduction in uncertainty,
- the time and effort invested by R&D teams do not translate proportionally into better decisions.
The organization tests extensively but learns very little.
How do we approach this in OpEx Innovation & Design?
In OpEx Innovation & Design, we view product development as a decision-making system, not as a sequence of stages or checklists. We design the way organizations learn about their products, reduce uncertainty, and make engineering decisions based on knowledge rather than intuition or time pressure.
We do not increase the number of tests. We design better tests, at the right time, to support better decisions.
Eliminating waste in product development and innovation
The biggest losses in R&D rarely result from a lack of competence. More often, they stem from waste in the learning process. In practice, we focus on eliminating:
- tests conducted without a clearly defined decision-making objective,
- prototypes that do not reduce uncertainty,
- iterations that generate little or no new information,
- lengthy testing campaigns with low learning value.
We design product development systems that:
- every test answers a specific decision-making question,
- the number of tests is kept to the minimum required,
- knowledge is actionable and carried forward into future decisions,
- engineers' time and thinking contribute directly to business outcomes.
Who do we work with?
- R&D teams and product development departments that design new products or technologies.
- Technology startups and scale-ups that develop products under time and capital constraints, need to reduce technological uncertainty quickly, and cannot afford to learn through mistakes in production or at the customer's site.
- Industrialization and production transfer teams that take over solutions developed in R&D, are responsible for industrialization, scaling, and process stability, and deal with the consequences of earlier design decisions.
Common denominator
Whether we work with an R&D team, a startup, or an industrialization team, the common denominator is the same: design decisions must be made deliberately, with full awareness of their long-term consequences.
OpEx Innovation & Design supports organizations that:
- want to prevent future problems rather than accept them,
- understand the cost of poor design decisions,
- are ready to view product development as a decision-making system rather than a sequence of stages.
If product development is taking longer, costing more, and still not providing confidence, let’s talk!
The first conversation is focused on understanding where knowledge, time, and money are being lost in your product development process and whether those losses can be addressed through better decisions rather than additional iterations.
