FAQ – Hardware NPI questions, answered
Plain answers to the questions hardware teams ask most. If yours is not here, ask me directly: the intro call is free.
What does an NPI consultant do?
NPI stands for New Product Introduction: the work of turning a concept or prototype into a product a factory can build at any volume. I own that transition for hardware teams: requirements, supplier selection, factory builds, and the production ramp.
When should a startup bring in NPI help?
Before you pick a factory, not after something goes wrong. The most expensive mistakes in hardware happen early and quietly: unclear requirements, the wrong supplier, designs a factory cannot hold. Fixing those on paper costs little. Fixing them in tooling costs months.
What does a fractional NPI leader cost?
A fraction of a full-time operations hire, structured to fit the stage you are in: hourly advising for pressure-testing decisions, or fixed-fee phases when I am running the work. Every engagement starts with a free 30-minute call.
How do I find a contract manufacturer for my product?
Do not start with a factory search. Start with a clear requirements and quote package, because suppliers can only give real answers to real questions. I have made 173 factory visits, and the pattern is consistent: teams that show up with clear documents get better factories, better prices, and better treatment.
Contract manufacturers also prefer to work with a final or near final design. They want to go straight into tooling after DFM, so you need to be ready.
CM: Contract Manufacturing
DFM: Design for Manufacturing
What are EVT, DVT, and PVT?
The three build stages between prototype and mass production: engineering validation (does the design work), design validation (does the real product survive real use), and production validation (can the factory build it at rate). Each stage exists to catch problems while they are still cheap.
EVT: Engineering Validation Testing
DVT: Design Validation Testing
PVT: Production Validation Testing
Do you work with crowdfunding creators and first-time founders?
Yes. If you have never taken a product to production, that is exactly the gap I fill. I have done it 60+ times and co-founded my own hardware startup, so I know both seats. I will walk you through the process.
Still have a question? Book a free 30-minute intro call.
