Avoid product launch delays by learning five common material selection mistakes. See how early decisions impact manufacturing and compliance.
Bringing a new product to market is rarely slowed down by one obvious problem. More often, delays come from decisions made early in development that do not hold up under real-world manufacturing and performance demands. One of the most common areas where this happens is material selection.
Engineers, product managers, and procurement teams all play a role in choosing materials, but the downstream impact of those choices can affect everything from manufacturability to compliance. When the wrong material is chosen, it can lead to rework, missed deadlines, quality issues, and increased costs.
Below are five material selection mistakes that frequently delay product launches and how to avoid them.
It is easy to select a material based on a limited set of requirements such as cost, appearance, or initial performance. However, many products operate in environments that introduce additional stress factors over time.
Key environmental factors that are often missed include:
A material that performs well in a controlled setting may fail in the field if these factors are not accounted for. When this happens, the result is often late-stage testing failures or field issues that require redesign.
A material may meet performance requirements but still be difficult to process. Converting methods like die cutting, lamination, embossing, and coating all introduce constraints that should influence material selection early.
Some common issues that arise include:
These problems can slow down production, increase scrap, or require tooling changes. Selecting materials that align with manufacturing capabilities helps improve efficiency and supports stronger first-time quality outcomes.
In regulated industries, material selection must account for more than performance. Documentation, traceability, and validation all play a role in whether a product can move forward.
This is especially important in life sciences applications where materials may need to support:
If these considerations are not addressed early, teams may encounter failed validation or extended approval timelines. These delays are often significant because they involve testing and documentation that cannot be accelerated.
Cost is always part of the decision-making process, but focusing only on upfront material cost can create challenges further down the line.
A lower-cost material may introduce:
A more effective approach is to evaluate total impact. This includes how the material affects manufacturing efficiency, product quality, and long-term performance. Improving first-time quality and reducing post-release defects often delivers more value than small cost savings upfront.
One of the most preventable mistakes is delaying collaboration with manufacturing experts. Material decisions made in isolation often overlook critical production considerations.
Bringing in manufacturing input early can help:
Organizations that integrate design and manufacturing early in the process are better positioned to stay on schedule and avoid unexpected setbacks.
Material selection is a foundational decision that affects product performance, production efficiency, and timeline risk. The most common mistakes tend to come from incomplete evaluation, misalignment with manufacturing processes, and late-stage decision changes.
With extensive experience in printing, converting, and advanced manufacturing, Tapecon works with product teams to help evaluate materials in the context of real-world production. This includes support from early development through prototyping and full-scale manufacturing, helping reduce risk and keep projects moving forward.
If material selection is influencing project timelines or introducing uncertainty, a collaborative evaluation with an experienced manufacturing partner can provide valuable clarity and direction.