ASSIGNMENT 2
DUE DATE: 26 MAY 2026
,AOM4801 ASSIGNMENT 2 2026
DUE 26 MAY 2026
2.1 GOODS AND SERVICE DESIGN
2.1.1 Research and write a short paper (approximately 1.5 typed pages)
advocating for customer-focused design.
A Short Paper Advocating for Customer-Focused Design
In the modern business landscape, the success of a good or service is no longer solely
dependent on its functionality or price. It is fundamentally determined by its ability to
meet and exceed customer expectations. Customer-focused design is not merely a
desirable approach; it is a strategic imperative for any organisation seeking sustainable
competitive advantage. This short paper advocates for the primacy of customer-focused
design by exploring its direct link to value creation, its methodology through Quality
Function Deployment (QFD), and its operational benefits.
At its core, the purpose of every organization is to provide value to its customers (Collier
& Evans, 2021, p. 8). Value is a customer’s perception of the benefits of a product
relative to its price. Therefore, designing a product without deeply understanding the
customer is a fundamental misstep. Customer-focused design ensures that the entire
development process begins by listening to the "voice of the customer" and translating
their wants and needs into specific, actionable technical features (Collier & Evans,
2021, p. 110). This approach stands in stark contrast to a “build-it-and-they-will-come”
, mentality, which risks investing resources in goods and services that the market
ultimately rejects. The marketplace is a "graveyard of missed opportunities: poorly
designed goods and services and failed execution" (Collier & Evans, 2021, p. 110), a
fate that can often be avoided through a conscious effort to be customer-centric.
Quality Function Deployment (QFD) is a powerful, structured methodology that gives life
to customer-focused design. QFD integrates the voice of the customer into all design,
creation, and marketing decisions (Collier & Evans, 2021, p. 110). The most recognised
tool in QFD is the House of Quality, a matrix that forces designers to systematically link
customer requirements with technical features. And evaluating the strength of these
relationships, designers can prioritise which technical aspects to focus on. For instance,
a customer requirement for a “long battery life” in a laptop has a strong relationship with
the technical feature of “battery capacity and processor energy efficiency.” The
competitive evaluation section of the matrix further aids decision-making by
benchmarking the proposed design against competitors on how well they satisfy
customer needs, helping to identify key selling points. This rigorous process ensures
that engineering decisions are driven by market demands, not just technical feasibility
(Collier & Evans, 2021, pp. 111-112).
The benefits of this approach are substantial and multifaceted. First, it drastically
reduces the risk of product failure. So validating customer desires at the concept stage
through market evaluation before major investments are made, companies avoid costly
late-stage design changes. Then customer-centric designs are sources of competitive
advantage. Products that are perceived to better meet customer needs can command
premium prices and foster higher levels of customer loyalty (Collier & Evans, 2021, p.
33). Customers today demand innovative products, high quality, and impeccable
service, and a customer-focused design process is the only way to consistently deliver
this value (Collier & Evans, 2021, p. 8). A clear and communicated customer focus
aligns the entire value chain, from research and development to marketing and sales,