{"id":9253,"date":"2021-03-04T13:12:42","date_gmt":"2021-03-04T11:12:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fractory.com\/?p=9253"},"modified":"2024-03-25T15:40:45","modified_gmt":"2024-03-25T13:40:45","slug":"design-in-industrial-engineering-case-study","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fractory.com\/design-in-industrial-engineering-case-study\/","title":{"rendered":"The Importance of Design in Industrial Engineering – Case Study"},"content":{"rendered":"
Cambridge Industrial Design<\/a> is an engineering company that offers a full service from design to production. We have been helping them with the latter part of their process, in the manufacturing stage.<\/p>\n We wanted to know what a company that can boast with the European Product Design Award (see the image above) thinks about the balance between design, manufacturability, cost<\/a>, etc. And we probably got a few very interesting insights from the discussion.<\/p>\n The company started in 1976, so we are just in the midst of celebrating our 45th anniversary. I joined in 1997 and became the managing director in 2007.<\/p>\n Yes, we have always offered a complete product development service. There is a big demand for managing projects to production and that hasn’t changed much over the years. The customers clearly appreciate having help throughout the whole process rather than just buying a pack of drawings.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Also, it’s important for us to oversee the whole cycle to ensure design intent is consistent throughout.<\/p>\n We do sometimes help with concept work if required but that is unusual. We have also helped with production advice if companies “hit a wall” with an existing design. The vast majority of projects are full service \u2013 it’s more cost-effective and less confusing for everyone.<\/p>\nHow long has the company been running for?<\/h4>\n
Have you always offered a full service from design to manufacturing or grown into it?<\/h4>\n
So does everyone go with the full service or do some pay for the engineering side only?<\/h4>\n
What sectors do you mostly serve?<\/h4>\n