Production

✅ What this stage is about

Production is where all your planning becomes output—real products, at volume, with quality.

The Production stage marks the transition from prototypes and samples to full manufacturing runs. It involves batch scheduling, production workflows, quality control, material sourcing, and continuous improvement processes. This stage requires tight coordination between design, engineering, operations, and commercial teams—because once you start building at scale, consistency and cost control are key.


📘 What you’ll manage

  • How many units to build, when, and with what materials
  • How to ensure every product meets specifications
  • What documentation and controls are needed during runs
  • How to handle defects, returns, or late-stage improvements
  • How to scale production in response to demand and feedback

🛠️ Tools and methods

This stage brings together planning, engineering, and manufacturing ops:

ActivityPurpose
Master Production Schedule (MPS)Plan output by time period, demand, and resource availability
Material Requirements Planning (MRP)Ensure parts, materials, and tools are available on time
Batch routing and work ordersGuide teams through build, inspection, and release workflows
Quality control proceduresDefine tests, visual checks, and defect thresholds
Production drawings + build docsEnsure operators and inspectors have the right information
Tooling + jig setupPrepare for repeatable, safe, efficient production
Packaging and assembly logisticsFinalise how products are packed, stored, and shipped
Change management and version controlEnsure only approved designs and methods are in use
  • Every production run must be documented, traceable, and controllable
  • Issues should trigger immediate feedback loops—not deferred rework

⚠️ Watch-outs

  • Starting production with unclear documentation or versioning
  • Missing materials or late parts due to poor MRP
  • Underestimating QC workload or capacity
  • Allowing undocumented fixes or “floor-level decisions”

💡 Tips from the field

“Our MRP said we were good to go—but two screws weren’t ordered. That $1 error delayed 3,000 units. Production isn’t just scale—it’s attention to detail.”

– Production Manager, Electronics Startup

💡 Good production processes are boring, repeatable, and incredibly valuable.


🔗 Helpful links & resources

  • MPS Template + Work Order Tracker
  • Download: Quality Control Log + Defect Tracker
  • Tool: Production Change Control Sheet
  • Article: How to Run Production That Doesn’t Break Under Pressure
  • Follow-on: Deliver

✍️ Quick self-check

Are all production files, tools, and materials ready before batch starts?
Do we have a clear MRP and QC plan?
Are build instructions version-controlled and traceable?
Is feedback from production logged and shared?

🎨 Visual concept (optional)

Illustration: A live production board with job cards (“Batch 12”), QC checklists, MRP tracker, and packed units on a rolling line. Sticky notes mark “Ready”, “Pending parts”, “Check jig alignment”.

Visual shows how the Production stage balances structure, speed, and quality to deliver consistent output.

🔄 Next Steps for Content Creation

Add visual: “Live Production Workflow Overview”
Link subpages: MRP, QC, Drawings, Work Orders, Change Control
Create Production Toolkit (MPS, QC log, build checklists)
Next container: Deliver