Home » Jack Of All Trades: Versatility in Product Design ?

Jack Of All Trades: Versatility in Product Design ?

Versatility in Product Design

Versatility in Product Design is risky: by trying to combine too many features, the risk is to obtain either a complicated product, fragile, costly or reaching none of the intended users or market.

This Post could benefit from your input.
Please add/comment on the right

jack of all trades, master of none in product design?

F35 jet
F35 jet

Common Reasons or Causes

  • no clear vision of the product or intended use
  • too many stakeholders
  • no leadership
  • no roots to market or market unknown (therefore “I want all these features; Everything is a must.“)
  • willing to save money (initially … later this will end anyway in the most expensive solution)
  • engineers being too … engineers! (or alone, or far from the field)
  • no “manage your boss” attitude from the technical team & designers

… or no time in the project to clear out with marketing some aspects above

Project Time spent at specs is never lost (but do converge!)

Risks / Consequences

Trying to combine all requested features, from our experience, always leads to the most complex with all its related consequences:

  • most costly
  • most heavy
  • each function, individually, could not be optimized
  • potentially less reliable
  • less ergonomic & complex maintenance

Example: The Swiss Knife

Made for years in Switzerland (see our Factory Tour video on this), it combines many features in a very compact design.

It has even become a common sentence for versatility (“The swiss knife of ….”).

Photography of lemon near kitchen knife
Cooking knife

If every feature is taken separately:

  • this is not the best blade ever to cook (length, thickness, steel, locking …)

 

  • this is not the best saw ever (size, ergonomics, resharpening ability …)

 

Good scissor
Good scissor
  • this is not the best scissor ever (size, ergonomics …)
  • is not the best can opener
  • not the best corkscrew
  • not the best file (length if to be used for more than for nails)

 

…. but it fits in the pocket, is durable for small applications, and fulfills our later conclusion here below.

Some more examples where we let you decide the marketing positioning and the versatility

    • cooking machines (mixing; cooking, weighting, including “smart” recipes …)
    • 4WD cars targetting cities
    • some tractor models
    • some bikes, combining big wheels of mountain bikes and gears and position of city bikes
    • some (very) big smartphones that barely fit in a pocket (back to “transportable” phone?)
    • multicolor pen (from 4-in-1 to 8-in-1 or even more)

Conclusion

Do it only when versatility IS the feature, not the sum of the features look after

Multitool
Multitool

And claim it as such.

Ex the “multitool” (usually in the knife shelf, but is it ?)

Tip: spend time as much as required on the initial specs, functions prioritization & value analysis rather than jumping directly on the drawing board.

This stage has the biggest impact on the final product.

Table of Contents
    Aggiungere un'intestazione per iniziare a generare l'indice.

    DESIGN or PROJECT CHALLENGE?
    Mechanical Engineer, Project or R&D Manager
    Effective product development

    Available for a new challenge on short notice in France & Swiss.
    Contact me on LinkedIn
    Plastic & metal products, Design-to-cost, Ergonomics, Medium to high-volume, Regulated industries, CE & FDA, CAD, Solidworks, Lean Sigma Black Belt, medical ISO 13485 Class II & III

    We are looking for a new sponsor

     

    Your company or institution is into technique, science or research ?
    > send us a message <

    Receive all new articles
    Free, no spam, email not distributed nor resold

    or you can get your full membership -for free- to access all restricted content >here<

    Topics covered: Versatility, Product Design, Stakeholders, Leadership, Market Research, Feature Creep, Cost Management, Reliability, Ergonomics, Maintenance, Multitool, Specifications, Function Prioritization, Value Analysis, Complexity, User Experience, Market Positioning, International Standard Organization (ISO), American National Standards Institute (ANSI), International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and International Organization for Standardization (ISO)..

    1. Kohen

      Doesnt the Swiss Knife example contradict the risk of being a Jack of all trades but master of none?

    2. reagan wehner

      You make an important point about the risks of overloading products with features, but it could benefit from including examples of successful products that have managed to balance versatility with simplicity, like the smartphone, which combines multiple functions without overwhelming the user.

    3. Queenie Murazik

      perhaps engaging more closely with end-users during the design process to ensure that the features included are both necessary and user-friendly?

    4. Rollin Bartoletti

      it’s worth noting that in certain contexts, like emergency survival kits, the versatility offered by multi-tools can be invaluable, even if they aren’t perfect at any single task.

    5. Tiana

      Isnt it ironic? Swiss Knife has everything yet fails as a reliable tool for complex tasks. Jack of all trades, master of none?

    Leave a Comment

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Related Posts

    Scroll to Top

    You May Also Like