The Business Cost of Inadequate Testing and Verification Inadequate Testing Priorities: The Hidden Business Risk in Product Development In product development, testing and verification are often praised in principle but underfunded in practice. Organizations regularly declare quality as a core value, yet budget allocations and schedule pressures reveal a different reality.  I am grateful to […]

A Product Is Both Good and Bad—Until Tested Not everything can be turned into a process. This is especially true early in product development, where ideas evolve faster than data. But there is a dangerous phase where uncertainty masquerades as progress. Like Schrödinger’s famous thought experiment, an untested product exists in a paradoxical state: it […]

When the Margin Is Unknown, Control Becomes Reaction Not everything can be turned into a process. This is especially true in early product development, where learning, discovery, and iteration dominate. However, when ambiguity persists beyond its appropriate stage—especially around dimensions, tolerances, and margins—organizations unintentionally transfer risk downstream. The image illustrates a simple truth: when the […]

By: Jon M Quigley When Process Helps—and When It Can’t We are a big fan of Aircraft Disasters on the Smithsonian Channel  (at least that is where we watch it).  This often appears in our written materials, including the occasional blog post.  This post origins from the season 4 episode 7, “Catastrophe at O’Hare” as well […]