Testing an ethical product goes beyond asking ‘does it work?’ It also asks ‘does it work well for the intended end user?’ and ‘is it responsible in its use of materials, processes, and cultural considerations?’
Testing methods in PDT are applied to existing products (during research and analysis) and to the student’s own developed product (during evaluation).
Design factor analysis
Systematically assess the product against a set of design factors:
- Function, aesthetics, materials, safety, ergonomics, sustainability, social/cultural impact
- For each factor: describe the product feature, evaluate it, and suggest improvement
Lifecycle analysis (LCA) — qualitative application
- Trace the product through its lifecycle stages
- Identify environmental, social, and economic impacts at each stage
- Evaluate whether the product’s sustainability claims are substantiated
Deconstruction and teardown
- Physically disassemble a product to examine construction methods, materials, and joinery
- Assess whether it is designed for disassembly and repair
Material identification and testing
- Identify material types (polymer identification tests, visual/tactile assessment)
- Assess surface quality, durability, and finish
Measurement and tolerance checking
- Verify whether dimensions meet specifications
- Assess quality consistency
Sustainability audit
- Apply a framework (6Rs, circular economy, TBL) to evaluate the product’s sustainability performance
- Investigate supply chain claims: are certifications genuine (FSC, Fairtrade, B-Corp)?
End user testing
- Provide the product to representative end users
- Observe use in the intended context
- Gather qualitative feedback (interviews, think-aloud protocol) and quantitative data (ratings against criteria)
Testing against evaluation criteria
- Systematically test each criterion: measure, observe, or survey as appropriate
- Record results; compare to the criterion benchmark
- Document pass, fail, or partial achievement for each criterion
Functional testing
- Load testing: apply the expected load to structural elements
- Durability testing: simulate extended use conditions
- Safety testing: check for sharp edges, toxic finishes, instability
Aesthetic evaluation
- Show the product to end users and ask for aesthetic responses
- Rate against aesthetic criteria (proportion, colour, finish quality)
Ethical self-audit
- Review design decisions: were materials ethically sourced? Were end users genuinely engaged? Were cultural considerations respected?
- Identify gaps and suggest improvements
KEY TAKEAWAY: Testing an ethical product requires evidence across function, safety, sustainability, aesthetics, and end user satisfaction. Evidence must be specific, not impressionistic.
EXAM TIP: When describing how to test a product, name the specific method (e.g. end user testing with a structured questionnaire), explain what it measures, and connect it to a specific evaluation criterion.