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Human Factors Engineering in New Product Development - Webinar (Recorded)

  • Webinar

  • 90 Minutes
  • January 2019
  • Compliance Online
  • ID: 4900009
Why Should You Attend:

Human factors engineering is extremely integral to user/market adoption. Getting a product to market is difficult whether you are a struggling startup or an established original equipment manufacturer (OEM). Understanding some of the tools available on the front end of product development might help you avoid downstream problems, before they become time and money wasters. Human factors engineering is one such tool. Human factors engineering will consider issues such as how people interact with your device so that the product is used correctly - every single time. It may include building in safe guards that prevent misuse, especially important with devices used in life and death environments. This webinar will address the integration of human factors into all phases of product life cycle.

Areas Covered in the Webinar:

Designing a solution without considering how someone may use it is potentially dangerous and can (significantly) impact market adoption. Some of the issues we will discuss include:

What is human factors engineering?
What role does human factors engineering play in the product development cycle?
How do you implement it in your product development plan?

Speakers

Tom Kramer, president and CEO of Kablooe Design, has been a product innovator for over 26 years, and holds a Certificate in Master of Product Development from Northwestern University and a Bachelor’s in Industrial Design degree from MCAD. He also holds a certificate from Stanford University in Cardiovascular System in Health and Disease. He creates revenue for his customers by delivering innovative product solutions to their portfolios. Mr. KraMer spearheaded the D3 Process™ (Design Driven Development), a vehicle to provide these results to customers, and he teaches this process by traveling as a lecturer and speaking about innovation, creativity, and development processes.