1.Time Pressure Get It Done Mentality:

  Blog    |     March 04, 2026

Design Change Records (DCRs) are crucial for traceability, quality control, compliance, and avoiding costly errors, yet they are frequently missing or incomplete. Here's a breakdown of the key reasons why:

  • Core Issue: Deadlines are relentless. When a design change is needed to fix a problem, meet a customer demand, or adapt to a supplier issue, the immediate pressure is to implement the fix fast.
  • Consequence: Documentation is seen as a bureaucratic hurdle slowing down progress. The "fix it now, document later" mentality often wins, but "later" rarely comes, especially under pressure for the next urgent change.
  1. Perceived Complexity & Burden:

    • Core Issue: The DCR process itself can be perceived as overly complex, time-consuming, and requiring significant detail.
    • Consequence: Engineers and designers, focused on solving technical problems, may view the paperwork as a non-value-added chore. If the system is clunky or requires excessive clicks/data entry, it gets bypassed.
  2. Lack of Training & Awareness:

    • Core Issue: Team members may not fully understand:
      • Why DCRs are essential (beyond "it's the rule").
      • What constitutes a change requiring a DCR (is a minor tweak significant enough?).
      • How to properly fill out the DCR form accurately and completely.
      • The potential consequences of not creating one.
    • Consequence: Inconsistent application, incomplete records, or outright avoidance because the process isn't clear or valued.
  3. Communication Silos & Informal Changes:

    • Core Issue: Changes are discussed and agreed upon informally (e.g., in hallway conversations, phone calls, emails, chats) without formal initiation.
    • Consequence: The "change" happens organically based on verbal agreements or quick emails, bypassing the formal DCR system entirely. There's no single point of record or official approval trail.
  4. Weak Process Enforcement & Accountability:

    • Core Issue:
      • Management: Leadership may not consistently enforce the DCR requirement, overlooking undocumented changes or not prioritizing the process.
      • Ownership: It might not be clear who is responsible for initiating and completing the DCR (the engineer? the project manager? the quality rep?).
      • Audits: Lack of regular audits to check for DCR compliance allows the practice to slide.
    • Consequence: Without consequences or clear ownership, the rule becomes optional. "Everyone knows we skipped it last time, so it's okay this time."
  5. "It's Just a Minor Change" Fallacy:

    • Core Issue: Changes are often categorized as "minor," "simple," "obvious," or "temporary" (e.g., "just tweak this dimension," "use this alternative material we have on hand").
    • Consequence: The perceived low risk leads to the assumption that documentation isn't necessary. However, "minor" changes can have significant downstream impacts on manufacturing, assembly, testing, service, or other components. This is a major source of undocumented changes causing later problems.
  6. Lack of Integration & Tooling:

    • Core Issue: The DCR system might be disconnected from the design tools (CAD, PLM), project management tools, or manufacturing systems.
    • Consequence: Creating a DCR requires manual data entry and switching between systems, increasing the burden and error potential. This friction discourages use. Poor tools make the process harder than it needs to be.
  7. Culture of Neglect:

    • Core Issue: Over time, if DCRs are consistently missing or incomplete without consequence, a culture develops where documentation is simply not valued as part of the engineering discipline. "We've always done it this way" (without records) becomes the norm.
    • Consequence: New hires learn the bad habit, and the importance of formal change control erodes, making it even harder to reintroduce rigor later.
  8. Fear of Exposure or Blame:

    • Core Issue: Initiating a DCR formally documents that a previous design was flawed or that a mistake was made. This can be uncomfortable or even feared by individuals concerned about blame or performance reviews.
    • Consequence: Changes are made quietly to avoid highlighting past errors or potential issues, keeping them off the official record.
  9. Ad-Hoc Nature of Changes:

    • Core Issue: Changes often arise unexpectedly during prototyping, testing, manufacturing trials, or customer feedback. There's no formal "change request" window.
    • Consequence: The reactive nature makes it harder to fit the change into a predefined, documented process. The urgency and informality of the situation naturally push documentation aside.

The Consequences are Severe:

Missing DCRs lead directly to:

  • Rework & Scrap: Manufacturing the wrong design repeatedly.
  • Quality Failures & Safety Hazards: Undocumented changes introducing defects or risks.
  • Compliance Violations: Failure to meet regulatory or customer requirements for traceability.
  • Knowledge Loss: Inability to know why a design changed or what the approved state is.
  • Inefficient Troubleshooting: Difficulty diagnosing problems because the as-built configuration isn't documented.
  • Project Delays & Cost Overruns: Rework, requalification, and fixing downstream issues caused by the undocumented change.
  • Reputational Damage: Delivering products based on undocumented, unapproved changes.

Addressing the Problem:

Combating missing DCRs requires a multi-pronged approach:

  • Strong Leadership Commitment: Leaders must visibly value and enforce the process.
  • Simplified & Integrated Tools: Make DCR creation easy and part of the natural workflow (e.g., integrated with CAD/PLM).
  • Clear Training & Communication: Explain the "why" and provide practical training on the "how."
  • Define "Change" Clearly: Provide unambiguous criteria for what requires a DCR.
  • Assign Clear Ownership: Designate responsibility for initiating and completing DCRs.
  • Implement Audits & Accountability: Regularly check for compliance and address non-compliance consistently.
  • Foster a Quality Culture: Emphasize that documentation is part of professional engineering practice, not bureaucracy.

Ultimately, the absence of DCRs is rarely due to malice alone; it's usually a symptom of systemic issues involving process friction, cultural norms, time pressure, and a lack of perceived value. Fixing it requires addressing these underlying causes head-on.


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