Testing time is money: The business impact of test equipment issues

Oct 14th at 08:04
14-10-2020 08:04:36+07:00

Testing time is money: The business impact of test equipment issues

Testing is a crucial element in the development cycle of any product, solution, or service. No matter what sector a business operates in, it will be subject to specific frameworks, standards, and regulations governing testing to assure that its products operate effectively and safely. Lawrence Liu, general manager for Asia-Pacific Sales (SAP) Operations at Keysight Technologies, writes about how important testing equipment is to businesses.

Testing time is money: The business impact of test equipment issues
Lawrence Liu, general manager for Asia-Pacific Sales (SAP) Operations at Keysight Technologies

The demands placed on research and development (R&D) engineers have proliferated in recent years, as the landscape becomes more complex with increased time pressures to bring new products and services to market. There are growing incidences of workflow issues related to the use of testing equipment, whether because equipment has been misconfigured, test engineers lack the necessary training or knowledge, or environmental interoperability or equipment failures cannot be debugged and resolved quickly enough. This materially adds to the intensity of development cycles.

The survey, conducted by Dimensional Research, consisted of 305 R&D engineers from a range of global organisations, including those in the technology and telecoms sectors. The results were clear – more than 90 per cent of companies have experienced revenue loss because of preventable delays related to testing and measurement equipment. For more than half (53 per cent) of companies – that revenue loss amounts to more than $100,000 of waste per day, waiting to resolve technical support issues. Loss of time results in loss of money. So how did this situation arise, and what can be done about it?

Testing time is money: The business impact of test equipment issues

Test cases increase by orders of magnitude

To remain competitive, companies must eliminate obstacles that cause delays. Design complexity, frequent design changes, and unfamiliar new technologies with rapidly developing standards can force engineers to troubleshoot technical issues on the fly. Product or service development schedules do not account for time required to troubleshoot and debug such issues. To maintain aggressive schedules, they must do so without the right resources, training, or expertise.

In the past, engineers would develop a deep familiarity with test equipment design and test standards. Today, they simply do not have the time to research how their test equipment works, how to optimise a configuration, or how to troubleshoot a complex setup to achieve the results specified in specs and industry standards. And with constant pressure to shorten new product development life cycles, market-leading companies cannot afford to wait days to access technical support experts to resolve issues.

As a practical example – in the past, R&D engineers would routinely download technical manuals to learn the inner workings of a product. They had an intimate understanding of the operation, test configuration, and use cases.

Today, test matrices have spiralled, vastly increasing test cases both in number and complexity. It is no longer feasible to master those cases while meeting customer expectations and time-to-market goals. R&D engineers rely on automation and sophisticated software to achieve speed. But if a test case fails, troubleshooting can be difficult and time-consuming.

Escalating business issues

Keysight’s third-party commissioned survey found 91 per cent of respondents said they experience business-impacting issues related to calibration, technical problem resolution, or equipment performance. In addition, 46 per cent reported their business suffers within the first day with test equipment not functioning to expectations. Furthermore, 72 per cent said calibration issues affect their business within three days, yet an average of 65 per cent said that the time it takes to calibrate and repair equipment is not fast enough, or predictable, lacking the needed Service Level Agreements (SLAs) to help mitigate schedule slips.

All in all, 97 per cent of respondents had experienced problems with test equipment which resulted in project delays. This included 63 per cent of respondents who said they had experienced test equipment failure, which then required repair. 56 per cent said they had experienced problems due to test equipment being improperly set up – problems with configuration, cabling, and so on. 50 per cent had experienced equipment being out of calibration, and 46 per cent had experienced problems with improper tool use – employees making mistakes, lack of training, programming issues, and so on. 29 per cent had experienced delays, waiting for new test equipment to be set up.

Direct impact on the business bottom line

All these problems can have critical business impacts. If the R&D engineering team cannot work for a single day because of problems with test and measurement equipment, the cost can be severe. 53 per cent of survey respondents said that the cost of this was $100,000 a day or more – and 5 per cent said it was more than $1 million.

In addition, 91 per cent of respondents explained that such issues had tangible and material business impacts, from reducing product yield (cited by 53 per cent), to products being rejected by buyers (47 per cent), to increased product returns (45 per cent) and even product recall (28 per cent). Such occurrences are costly and those costs can linger for multiple quarters as firms struggle to regain their customer’s confidence as a quality supplier.

A material difference

In this complex environment, it is not surprising that 60 per cent of reported problems relate to incorrect test equipment setup or improper use. These factors alone suggest that as product designs and test solutions increase in complexity, access to technical support expert resources and information grows more important. When problems arise, companies need fast, reliable guidance to troubleshoot and resolve issues. Having the right technical support can reduce time to resolution when troubleshooting and diagnosing advanced measurement techniques.

Note how often test professionals require assistance: 95 per cent said they need help every month, and 59 per cent said they experience six or more technical support issues each month. 94 per cent of electronic test professionals said they need committed, fast-response technical support.

What is even more apparent is that expectations and demands upon technical support have dramatically changed. Nearly half of the professionals surveyed said existing technical support models do not meet their expectations and business needs. They said technical support models need to be highly knowledgeable, immediately accessible with faster, committed response times, 68 per cent thought they could save multiple days each year using a priority support model.

Modern testing and development require a modern technical support approach, tailored to meet the needs of agile, connected design and test. Each generation of technology increases this complexity. Test and measurement companies must respond and resolve technical support issues faster to help their customers stay ahead of test standards, test methodology, and equipment maintenance.

Overall, priority access to test experts with committed response times and proactive notifications, calibration services, and repair facilities with committed turnaround times and a state-of-the-art digital experience can make a material difference, whether engineers are designing or manufacturing a product. The right support can enable a team to deliver a quality product on schedule and help avoid the design or production issues that result in costly delays.

VIR





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