Many manufacturing cost problems begin before production ever starts.
A cable assembly may use an expensive connector that is difficult to source. A wire harness may be designed with routing that increases labor time. A PCBA may include components with long lead times or placement challenges. A drawing may look complete from an engineering standpoint but still create avoidable cost, quality, or production issues once it reaches the manufacturing floor.
That is where design for manufacturability, or DFM, becomes valuable.
For OEMs producing cable assemblies, wire harnesses, and PCBAs, DFM is one of the most effective ways to reduce total manufacturing cost while improving quality, repeatability, and speed to production.
Sanbor Manufacturing supports OEMs with cable assembly, wire harness assembly, PCBA manufacturing, and related contract manufacturing services. Its broader positioning emphasizes helping OEMs reduce risk and manage supply chains with confidence.
Design for manufacturability is the process of reviewing a product design to ensure it can be manufactured efficiently, consistently, and cost-effectively.
In contract manufacturing, DFM is not about changing the product’s purpose. It is about identifying practical improvements that make the design easier to build, test, source, inspect, and scale.
For cable assemblies, wire harnesses, and PCBAs, DFM may involve reviewing:
OEMs often involve a contract manufacturer after the design is already finalized. At that point, manufacturing issues may still be found, but they are harder and more expensive to correct.
Late-stage changes can trigger:
By involving a manufacturing partner earlier, OEMs can catch many of these issues before they reach production.
Cable assembly cost is influenced by more than wire length and connector price. It can be affected by material selection, jacket requirements, shielding, overmolding, strain relief, labeling, testing, and labor complexity.
DFM can help reduce cable assembly cost by identifying:
A small change in connector selection, cable construction, or assembly method can have a meaningful impact when multiplied across production volume.
Wire harnesses are often labor-intensive because they involve routing, branching, cutting, stripping, crimping, labeling, bundling, and connectorization. Poor design choices can increase assembly time and create quality risk.
DFM can help improve wire harness programs by reviewing:
A harness that is easier to route and assemble is often more consistent, less expensive, and less prone to installation errors.
PCBA cost is heavily influenced by component selection, board layout, assembly process, testing, and sourcing risk.
DFM can help identify:
For OEMs, PCBA DFM is especially important because a board-level issue may not become visible until final assembly or product testing.
Design decisions can create sourcing risk. If a design depends on a single-source component, long-lead connector, hard-to-find terminal, or custom material with limited availability, the manufacturing program becomes more vulnerable to delay.
A contract manufacturer with supply chain visibility can help identify these risks earlier and recommend practical alternatives where appropriate.
Sanbor can assist with supplier consolidation and bundling PCBA, cable assembly, and wire harness manufacturing as a way for OEMs to reduce handoffs, improve quality, and simplify supplier management.
OEMs should consider a DFM review when:
DFM is most valuable before tooling, sourcing, and production decisions are locked in.
A useful DFM review typically starts with:
The more context the manufacturer has, the more useful the recommendations will be.
Design for manufacturability is one of the most effective ways for OEMs to reduce cost, improve quality, and avoid production delays in cable assembly, wire harness, and PCBA programs.
By involving a qualified contract manufacturing partner earlier in the process, OEMs can identify sourcing risks, simplify assembly, improve test planning, and build a stronger path from design to production.
Sanbor Manufacturing supports OEMs with cable assembly, wire harness assembly, PCBA manufacturing, and related services designed to help improve production outcomes, reduce supply chain risk, and support scalable manufacturing.
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Design for manufacturability, often called DFM, is the process of reviewing a product design to make sure it can be manufactured efficiently, consistently, and cost-effectively. For cable assemblies, wire harnesses, and PCBAs, this may include reviewing materials, connectors, routing, wire gauges, component availability, testability, labeling, documentation, and production volume requirements.
DFM helps reduce manufacturing costs by identifying design and sourcing issues before production begins. A manufacturability review can uncover opportunities to simplify assembly, reduce labor time, improve material selection, avoid long-lead components, improve test planning, and reduce scrap or rework. These improvements can lower total production cost without sacrificing quality or product performance.
DFM is important for cable assemblies because design choices such as connector selection, shielding, jacket material, strain relief, bend radius, and cable length can affect cost, lead time, durability, and ease of assembly. Early review can help OEMs avoid over-specifying materials, selecting difficult-to-source connectors, or creating designs that are harder to manufacture consistently.
Wire harnesses often include multiple branches, connectors, terminals, labels, sleeves, and routing paths. DFM helps ensure the harness can be assembled, installed, tested, and serviced efficiently. It can also help reduce wiring errors, improve harness board layout, simplify routing, and improve repeatability during production.
DFM is important for PCBAs because board layout, component selection, test point access, thermal considerations, soldering requirements, and BOM risk can all affect production quality and cost. A PCBA manufacturability review can help identify obsolete or long-lead components, placement issues, inspection challenges, and testing limitations before they create production delays.
OEMs should request a manufacturability review before a design is finalized, before submitting an RFQ, before moving from prototype to production, or before transferring production to a new manufacturing partner. DFM is also valuable when a current program is experiencing quality issues, rising costs, long lead times, or inconsistent production results.
OEMs should provide drawings, specifications, BOMs, schematics when applicable, target production volume, forecast expectations, application requirements, test requirements, compliance needs, packaging requirements, and any known supplier or production challenges. The more complete the information, the more useful the manufacturability feedback will be.
Yes. DFM can help OEMs identify design, documentation, sourcing, testing, and process issues before transferring production or scaling to higher volumes. This can reduce the risk of delays, quality problems, rework, and unexpected cost increases during supplier transition or production ramp-up.