Product evolution refers to how firms who have the visions not merely seeing a product idea, but how that merchandise will evolve as time move. It’s fundamentally the idea of mapping out, habitually before the first item is even manufactured, what future iterations of a product could be as it grows and improves. The origin of the formula is built on a Russian system called “TRIZ.
Sophisticated designs are typically the effect of design evolution. An unsophisticated first design will generally have been developed from initial sources of information, usually from a basic need. In the lifetime of the first product, data in the form of feedback, better materials and new processes from the merchandise’s use will then offer impetus to develop the design further. The challenging economic weather has made all companies to re-evaluate their marketing and scrutinize methods to segregate their products from their rivals. The design has a central role in sales, and there are abundant examples of enhanced sales reshapes of products and packaging, which lead to improved growth and sales in market share. The product design is not entirely new since other firms who have been operations is facing stiff competition and thus redesign their products to compete effectively.
A prototype is an early model, sample or release of a product made to experiment a concept or process. A prototype is customarily used to assess a new design to heighten precision by the system user and analysts—prototyping assists to give specifications for an existing, working system instead of hypothetical one. Having a prototype makes it easier to comprehend the tasks for every member of the team. It offers them the chance to do the further realistic design of development deadlines and more precisely define the cost of work. A prototype, in my view, is identical in appearance to the final product.
A prototype may not (and probably should not) be identical in appearance to the final product and I would argue that if it is, you started the process with an end product in mind, which defeats the purposes of testing, refining and customer feedback. Maybe you mean the final prototype? An early model made for testing a specific problem/solution may look nothing like the final product.