Design review
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the general concept. For Design reviews in DoD and NASA, see Design review (U.S. government). For the magazine, see Design Review (publication).
A design review is a milestone within a product development process whereby a design is evaluated against its requirements in order to verify the outcomes of previous activities and identify issues before committing to—and, if need be, to re-prioritise—further work.[1] The ultimate design review, if successful, therefore triggers the product launch or product release.
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The conduct of design reviews is compulsory as part of design controls, when developing products in certain regulated contexts such as medical devices.
By definition, a review must include persons who are external to the design team.