Various approaches to support product development, ranging from German VDI guidelines to agile strategies, share commonalities, e.g., they recommend methods like requirement elicitation or product evaluation strategies. While extensively present in design education, the distinctive effect of development approaches on resulting products often remains unassessed. This paper presents the framework of an empirical study and its results, examining (1) the influence of development method application on product concept quality and (2) the effect of effort spent on both. Participants were supervised in their development process as part of an undergraduate higher education course. Data was assessed via rubrics or self-assessment and investigated using descriptive and inferential statistics. The findings show a significant moderate to strong positive correlation between effort spent and method application quality but no significant effect on product concept quality. However, the introduced framework is a streamlined blueprint for similar studies in educational and entrepreneurial contexts.
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Various approaches to support product development, ranging from German VDI guidelines to agile strategies, share commonalities, e.g., they recommend methods like requirement elicitation or product evaluation strategies. While extensively present in design education, the distinctive effect of development approaches on resulting products often remains unassessed. This paper presents the framework of an empirical study and its results, examining (1) the influence of development method application o...
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