
Best Product Development Focus Quotes
Product Development Focus
Table of Contents
- Enjoying and Trusting the Process
- Preparation and Execution
- Collaboration and Teamwork
- Innovation and Adaptation
- Other
Enjoying and Trusting the Process

If you enjoy the process, you're most likely to like the finished product as well
Protocols we have learned have the opportunity to become supplies when they encounter the solvent of this moment's need, softening to become flexible and adaptive.
In TV we've used something that I love... it's called process. I love process.
I really think of it - acting and writing and producing, whatever - as shipping. You gotta ship. Put the widget together in the easiest, quickest way possible and ship the product.

It is not a question of how well each process works, the question is how well they all work together.
The production gives you a real life simulation. You've got to trust each other and get it done. It's not a typical 'work hard, study and get a grade' class.
The process is the most beautiful part.
That can be one of the most fun parts of the process.
It's all about process to me - as long as it's fun to me, I don't care about the final product.

If you're going to try to put this process into a box, it's going to kill you.
Love the process and you’ll love what the process produces.
It's the preparation that's my favourite part of the process.
Everything is a process.
Preparation and Execution

Preparation is a process.
I try to preload as little as I can. I like to come to the set with minimal preparation.
If you would ask me what my ideal process is, I would say, long pre-production, long production and long post-production.
We follow instructions to my destination, a chamber for my preparation.

It's good to be first on some things, but sometimes it's bad. We're interested in getting (the synthetic surface) perfect. We'll keep experimenting on how best we can do that.
I also do my own processing, so it means a big commitment in lab time.
The process is always the same, it doesn't really matter what the object is, whether it's a prototype or whether it's for production,
I will very much try to ensure the formation process is calm.
You want to do a few things really well because you want to come out with a product that is fully baked, even though it may be lacking in a few features or whatever, rather than the one that's all-achieving but not doing anything too well.

Well, no, you can prepare it all you want, but I'd still stutter.
You can’t make a recipe for something as complicated as surgery. Instead, you can make a recipe for how to have a team that’s prepared for the unexpected.
Preparation is key.
Preparation is everything.
From a producing standpoint, I think prep is everything.
Collaboration and Teamwork

Instead of casting aspersions at the process, why don’t you redirect your energy towards something more advantageous, like finally completing the Program!
Whatever Kanye tells me, I just try to put it in my little machine and make the perfect solution for it. That's always our collab formula, and that's just how 'Gorgeous' came about.
I really, really want to produce. That's the top of my to-do list.
I know I always worked hard on making sure we came out with the best possible product and of course we were working with four other people, you have to balance that as well.

I am a little disappointed in the process. It's not as tight of a process as I am comfortable with.
As I had always said, it takes two people to work hard to create the chemistry.
Producing is getting the performances, tracking it, making sure all the parts are there. Mixing is when you take the finished work, and you make sure all the levels are right. It's putting all the parts together.
I was given a lot of homework: I had to practise ironing as a synth, practise washing up as a synth, cooking a meal as a synth. It's definitely the most prep I've had to do for a role.
I would like to produce, and eventually, I would like to direct.

To each his own, but my process of preparation is based on conditions, not opposition.
Innovation and Adaptation

Take the lid off limiting thoughts and let the juices flow, your unlimited possibilities are awaiting. ~Janiece Rendon Transition Strategist
In order to get the product you must spend ample time on the process.
I am Freeth, and I have come to apply the phase-rule to the ammonia-soda process.[First words on joining the Brunner-Mond Company in 1907.]
You certainly want to see anything related to manufacturing start to turn up, but it's not giving any indication of solidification,

I make work a bit like how you mix cocktails - with ingredients like budget, history and location.
You put those all together, you can get some pretty significant production out of there.
We have developed a way to do multiple reactions in a single vessel while being able to recover the catalysts in pure form for reuse. By doing the reactions in a single vessel, we can cut out two or three separation steps to provide both an economic advantage and an environmentally benign process.
The actual producing, mixing, and mastering is hard work, harder than what I do.
I was not prepared for the actual process itself; having to go to the shop and having some molds done.

Synthesis is the process of making a natural product, or some other substance, artificially, in the lab, one step at a time, from extremely simple building blocks.
Carbon-carbon bond formation reactions employing organoboron compounds and organic electrophiles have recently been recognized as powerful tools for the construction of new organic compounds.
But the processes out there, I think, are too heavy weight.
It takes time to reach the perfect shade and formulations. That's something that's in the science.
I am interested in the highbrow/lowbrow synthesis. My sensibility, I am proud to say, is middlebrow.
Other

I want all my drems to come true,But for that I have to keep patience and burn the midnight oil.
It's all execution, make sure you're executing, be electrifying don't get electrocuted.
I’ve been to Vulcan where I’ve been vulcanized, Carbon where you get carbonated and Standard where you get standardized. Ernie Isley’s invited me to Castor … and I’m not looking forward to it.
The more pieces you have to a process, the more expensive.

Usually, it takes between 10 and 20 layers to get the desired coating,
I would like to do whatever it is that presses the essence from the hour.
I really, really want to produce. That’s the top of my to-do list.
I don't want to have to do production, which is very technical. I don't enjoy that.
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Patrick Wright
Software engineer and creator of Quotesperation. I curate wisdom from history's greatest minds to inspire and guide modern life. When I'm not collecting quotes, I'm writing about technology and finding connections between timeless wisdom and today's challenges.
