Many life science organizations treat design thinking and design controls as separate product development stages. In reality, they can overlap; while this feels counterintuitive to some, it’s actually an important point that teams need to manage. For a more robust product development process, your teams should be thinking about how to use these two aspects of product development together. How design thinking can impact design controls is valuable to understand and evaluate as part of your organization’s plans for long-term growth.
Design thinking can be highly productive in depicting ideas related to your life science products. Tools such as journey mapping and storyboarding can identify user needs and customer voices that can influence the scope of your development activities. By seeing what these needs look like and the context in which they occur, you can make better decisions about your product design.
Looking at the language of the design inputs regulation can help us understand the value of design thinking. FDA wants to see that all inputs identified in the design process are appropriate, as well as aligned with the intended use and your user needs. The alignment aspects are easy enough to take care of, but how do you know that any given design feature is “appropriate”? There’s a lot of gray area with this regulatory language, but that’s where design thinking fits in. When thoroughly utilized, design thinking tools generate data that supports the inclusion and development of any given input into the product design.
When the rigor of design controls is applied to design thinking data, it is easier to detect risks and other issues that could impact later-stage development. Likewise, early phase design thinking activities such as rapid prototyping can identify proposed ideas and solutions that may negatively impact the product design. Especially if these design thinking tools are used in an iterative fashion with design controls activities, the relationship between innovation and compliance can be used to great effect in the development process.
Design thinking is a powerful approach to innovation in life sciences, but it’s also an effective methodology for compliance. When focused on generating creative ideas and solutions, design thinking—when appropriately paired with the right design controls activities—can transform your product development. Innovation and compliance can go hand in hand, and by recognizing this, life science organizations can adopt leaner and more user-focused approaches to building life science products.