From Prototype to Production: Industrializing Your Connected Hardware

June 4, 2026

Written by Christian Simard · Last updated 2026-06-04 · 10 min read

Short answer: moving an IoT prototype to volume production is less about the next board spin and more about four gates: a DFM/DFT review so it can be built and tested at scale, FCC/IC certification for anything with a radio, a second-source strategy so a shortage doesn’t stop the line, and the right EMS partner. Plan the post-ship lifecycle (provisioning, OTA) at the same time — production is the start of the device’s life, not the end of the project.

Key takeaways

  • DFM before tooling. Run Design for Manufacturing/Test at the EVT→DVT transition, not after your first failed build.
  • Certify the radio path early. A pre-certified module is the single biggest lever on FCC/IC cost and schedule.
  • Design second sources in. Pin-compatible alternates at design time beat a redesign during an allocation crunch.
  • Match the EMS to your volume curve. A Canadian EMS speeds NPI; offshore can win at high volume.
  • OTA from day one. A fielded device you can’t update safely is a liability.

The four gates from prototype to production

A working prototype proves the idea. It does not prove you can build ten thousand of them, certify them, source them through a shortage, or support them for years. Those are four separate gates — clear them in order and the ramp is boring (which is what you want).

Gate 1 — Design for Manufacturing and Test (DFM/DFT)

DFM is a structured review of whether your board and enclosure can be produced reliably and affordably at volume: footprints, tolerances, panelization, component availability, thermal and RF clearances — and crucially test access, so every unit can be tested on the line. Run it at the EVT→DVT transition, before you commit tooling and your first production order. A DFM pass here is the cheapest engineering you will ever buy.

Gate 2 — Regulatory certification (FCC, ISED/IC, and friends)

Anything that transmits needs certification, and the cost is driven by your radio choice:

Approach Cost & schedule When it fits
Pre-certified module (modular approval) Lowest — reuse the module’s grant Most products; fastest path to market
Custom RF design (intentional radiator) Highest — full lab testing, possible re-tests Cost-down at high volume, special RF needs

Selling in both the US and Canada means both FCC and ISED/IC filings; the EU adds CE/RED. Budget lab time and a buffer for re-tests after fixes.

Gate 3 — Supply chain and second-sourcing

The 2021–2023 shortages taught everyone the same lesson: single-source critical parts are a single point of failure. Build resilience in at design time:

  • Choose components with pin-compatible alternates.
  • Avoid sole-source parts for anything on the critical path.
  • Keep the BOM footprint-flexible so an alternate drops in without a respin.
  • Validate alternates during DVT — not during a crisis.

Gate 4 — Choosing an EMS (and why Canada is often right for NPI)

The contract manufacturer choice is a trade-off between unit cost and everything else:

Canadian EMS Offshore EMS
NPI speed Fast, local, bilingual Slower iteration loops
Logistics & IP Short, lower IP exposure Longer, more controls to manage
Unit cost at volume Competitive at moderate volume Can win at very high volume

A common pattern: start domestic for NPI and early production, then dual-source as volume justifies it.

Don’t forget the device’s life after the line

Production is the beginning of the fleet, not the end of the project. The moment a unit ships you need to provision it, identify it, update it and support it — securely and with audit evidence. Designing that in from day one is cheap; bolting it on after launch is not.

Where Fundamentum fits

Industrializing hardware is not only about the board — it’s about what happens after the device ships. Fundamentum handles fleet provisioning, device identity, governed OTA and an audit trail so that the moment a unit comes off the EMS line it can be enrolled, updated and supported securely. That turns ‘production’ into a managed lifecycle instead of a one-time handoff, inside a SOC 2 Type II perimeter. See device lifecycle management →

SOC 2 Type II. Fundamentum operates within Groupe Vectanor’s SOC 2 Type II perimeter — independently audited by RCGT, report dated April 15, 2026. Your device data is governed, encrypted and traceable end to end.

Frequently asked questions

What is a DFM review and when do I need one?

Design for Manufacturing (DFM) is a structured review that checks whether your board and enclosure can be built reliably and affordably at volume — footprints, tolerances, panelization, test access, thermal and RF clearances. Run it before you commit to tooling and your first production order, ideally at the EVT/DVT transition.

How much does FCC/IC certification cost for a BLE device?

Cost depends on whether you use a pre-certified radio module (much cheaper, modular approval) or a custom RF design (full intentional-radiator testing). Budget for lab test time, possible re-tests after fixes, and both FCC (US) and ISED/IC (Canada) filings if you sell in both. Using a certified module is the single biggest cost lever.

How do I protect against component shortages?

Design second sources in from the start: choose parts with pin-compatible alternates, avoid single-source critical components, keep your BOM footprint-flexible, and validate alternates during DVT instead of during a crisis. A second-source strategy at design time is far cheaper than a redesign during an allocation event.

Should I choose an EMS in Canada or offshore?

It’s a trade-off. A Canadian EMS shortens logistics, eases IP and ITAR/controlled-goods concerns, and makes NPI iterations faster and bilingual. Offshore can lower unit cost at high volume. Many programs start with a domestic EMS for NPI and early production, then dual-source as volume justifies it. Match the choice to your volume curve and risk tolerance.

How do I update firmware on devices already in the field?

Plan for OTA from day one. You need a signed firmware pipeline, device identity, staged rollouts with rollback, and audit evidence of what shipped where. Bolting OTA on after launch is painful; designing it in is cheap. Fundamentum provides governed OTA and the audit trail so fielded updates are controlled, not risky.

CS
Written by Christian Simard — VP Technology & Innovation, Amotus.

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