Knowledge base

Lean Product Development (LPD)

Introduction: (LPD)

Lean Product Development (LPD) applies Lean thinking to product and process design. It focuses on maximising customer value, reducing waste, and accelerating innovation. Unlike traditional linear development, Lean Product Development encourages concurrent engineering, early collaboration, and knowledge capture to improve quality and speed while reducing cost.

Background

Originating from Toyota’s Product Development System, Lean Product Development was formalised by researchers such as Allen Ward, Durward Sobek, James Morgan, and Jeffrey Liker. Toyota discovered that design decisions made early in development determine most of a product’s lifecycle cost and quality. By “front-loading” knowledge and using iterative learning cycles, Toyota was able to produce high-quality products faster and with fewer resources than competitors.

Key Elements / Features

Lean Product Development is guided by the 13 principles identified by Morgan and Liker:

  1. Define customer value clearly.
  2. Front-load development by exploring options early.
  3. Maintain a level and steady workflow.
  4. Use rigorous standardisation to reduce variation.
  5. Empower a chief engineer to integrate all functions.
  6. Balance functional depth with cross-functional teamwork.
  7. Build technical mastery in all engineers.
  8. Involve suppliers early in development.
  9. Foster learning through feedback and continuous improvement.
  10. Create a culture of excellence and kaizen.
  11. Adapt technologies to people and processes.
  12. Communicate visually through simple systems.
  13. Capture and reuse knowledge across projects.

Applications / Examples

Automotive, aerospace, and electronics industries widely use Lean Product Development. For example, Toyota’s Obeya (“big room”) concept aligns teams visually, speeding up decisions and communication. Companies such as Ford and Boeing have adopted similar systems to reduce rework, improve collaboration, and shorten time-to-market.

Relevance / Impact

Lean Product Development enhances innovation, reduces development cycles, and ensures better integration between design and manufacturing. By embedding learning into every stage, it prevents knowledge loss and promotes continuous improvement. Its alignment with Lean and Six Sigma principles makes it a foundation for sustainable product excellence.

See also

Anend Harkhoe
Lean Consultant & Trainer | MBA in Lean & Six Sigma | Founder of Dmaic.com & Lean.nl
With extensive experience in healthcare (hospitals, elderly care, mental health, GP practices), banking and insurance, manufacturing, the food industry, consulting, IT services, and government, Anend is eager to guide you into the world of Lean and Six Sigma. He believes in the power of people, action, and experimentation. At Dmaic.com and Lean.nl, everything revolves around practical knowledge and hands-on training. Lean is not just a theory—it’s a way of life that you need to experience. From Tokyo’s karaoke bars to Toyota’s lessons—Anend makes Lean tangible and applicable. Lean.nl organises inspiring training sessions and study trips to Lean companies in Japan, such as Toyota. Contact: info@dmaic.com

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