-
-
News
News Highlights
- Books
Featured Books
- design007 Magazine
Latest Issues
Current IssueLearning to Speak ‘Fab’
Our expert contributors clear up many of the miscommunication problems between PCB designers and their fab and assembly stakeholders. As you will see, a little extra planning early in the design cycle can go a long way toward maintaining open lines of communication with the fab and assembly folks.
Training New Designers
Where will we find the next generation of PCB designers and design engineers? Once we locate them, how will we train and educate them? What will PCB designers of the future need to master to deal with tomorrow’s technology?
The Designer of the Future
Our expert contributors peer into their crystal balls and offer their thoughts on the designers and design engineers of tomorrow, and what their jobs will look like.
- Articles
- Columns
Search Console
- Links
- Media kit
||| MENU - design007 Magazine
Estimated reading time: 1 minute

The Shaughnessy Report: Design for Profitability Now Part of the Process
Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary defines the word “profit” this way:
1. A valuable return: Gain.
2. The excess of returns over expenditure in a transaction or series of transactions, especially: The excess of the selling price of goods over their cost.
It’s easy to define profit, but it’s much more difficult to define exactly what “design for profitability” (DFP) means to today’s PCB designers and design engineers. How can technologists create profit in every design when the board’s stakeholders are often spread out across several time zones and continents? It’s a tough concept to get your arms around. Some of you work in giant OEMs; do you have any idea how much your last design cost—man-hours, components, laminates, etc.?
When I started working on this issue, I was happy to hear that many designers were already familiar with DFP. When I first mentioned DFP to designers years ago, they’d look at me like I had two heads. After all, designers used to feel as if they were the lowest person on the totem pole, and many didn’t realize the power that they wield over the profit of the PCB and, potentially, the final product. Fortunately, that has changed, for the most part.
In a recent Design007 Magazine survey, about two-thirds of respondents said that cost is a definite factor in their design process. Apparently, most CAD managers are well aware of the designers’ power to massage costs; some engineering managers believe that up to 80% of the board’s cost can be determined during the design cycle. Some designers are also being tasked with making cost-aware design decisions each day. Designers—already forced into thinking like degreed engineers, often making system-level decisions—must now think like accountants as well.
To read this entire column, which appeared in the March 2020 issue of Design007 Magazine, click here.
More Columns from The Shaughnessy Report
The Shaughnessy Report: Breaking Down the Language BarrierThe Shaughnessy Report: Back to the Future
The Shaughnessy Report: The Designer of Tomorrow
The Shaughnessy Report: A Stack of Advanced Packaging Info
The Shaughnessy Report: A Handy Look at Rules of Thumb
The Shaughnessy Report: Are You Partial to Partial HDI?
The Shaughnessy Report: Silicon to Systems—The Walls Are Coming Down
The Shaughnessy Report: Watch Out for Cost Adders