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A Complete Guide for Device Manufacturers

Medical device procurement isn’t a simple purchase it’s a multi-year program partnership. When sourcing power supplies for IEC 60601-1 compliant medical devices, your RFQ process determines more than just product specifications. It establishes documentation quality, NRE value, supply chain reliability, and lifecycle support for products that may remain in production for 10-15 years.

Poor RFQ structure leads to predictable failures: incomplete supplier responses, NRE scope disputes, documentation gaps discovered during FDA or Notified Body audits, component obsolescence without warning, and supplier financial failures mid-lifecycle. This guide provides a procurement-focused framework for medical power supply RFQs that addresses technical requirements, documentation deliverables, commercial terms, and long-term supply chain management.

What Should Be Included in a Medical Power Supply RFQ?

A comprehensive medical power supply RFQ must address four critical areas beyond basic technical specifications:

1. Documentation Requirements Definition

For Your Design History File (DHF/DDF):

  • Design input specifications and requirements
  • Design output documentation (schematics, specifications, BOMs)
  • Design verification records (testing that outputs meet inputs)
  • Design validation records (testing under simulated use conditions)
  • Design review meeting minutes and decisions
  • Requirements traceability matrix
  • Risk management file per ISO 14971 (FMEA, hazard analysis)
  • Design transfer documentation

Critical procurement questions to answer:

  • What format do you need? (PDF reports, editable source files, your specific templates)
  • What detail level is required for your DHF structure?
  • What delivery timeline? (At design freeze, production release, or phased delivery)
  • Will documentation pass your regulatory audits without reformatting?

For Your Device Master Record (DMR):

  • Manufacturing process specifications with process parameters
  • Bill of materials with approved component manufacturers
  • Inspection and test procedures (incoming, in-process, final)
  • Critical process controls and acceptance criteria
  • Equipment calibration requirements

Critical procurement question:

  • Will supplier provide camera-ready DMR documentation or raw data requiring your team to reformat?

Regulatory Compliance Evidence:

  • ISO 13485 certificate (verify scope includes both design AND manufacturing)
  • Complete IEC 60601-1 test reports from accredited laboratories (not just certificates)
  • IEC 60601-1-2 EMC test reports with essential performance criteria
  • Declaration of Conformity
  • CB certificates and test reports for international markets
  • UL/CSA certificates for North American market

Critical procurement question:

  • Who pays for compliance testing included in NRE or separate line item?

2. NRE Scope Definition

What should be included in NRE quote:

  • Design and engineering effort (specify deliverables)
  • Prototype fabrication specify how many iterations (typically 1-2 cycles)
  • Design verification testing (DVT)
  • Design validation testing under simulated use conditions
  • Compliance testing at accredited laboratories (IEC 60601-1, IEC 60601-1-2 EMC)
  • Documentation package preparation list exact documents in exact formats
  • Manufacturing setup, tooling, and first article inspection (FAI)
  • Project management and design reviews

What typically requires separate line items:

  • Additional country-specific certifications beyond standard (e.g., China CCC, Korea KC)
  • Customer-specific testing beyond design validation requirements
  • Custom tooling for unique mechanical components
  • Extended prototype iterations beyond agreed scope (iteration 3+)

Common NRE scope disputes to prevent:

Dispute AreaProblemSolution
Documentation package“Package” interpretation varies wildlySpecify exact documents in exact formats with example templates
Prototype iterationsSupplier assumes 1, you expect 3Define number of iterations explicitly (1-2 standard)
Re-testing costsDesign change requires re-testSpecify who pays for re-testing after design modifications
Testing scope“Compliance testing” undefinedList specific tests, standards, number of samples
Ongoing updatesDocumentation updates during developmentDefine when documentation gets updated and finalized

3. Lifecycle and Supply Chain Requirements

Production Lifecycle Commitment:

  • Minimum guaranteed availability period: Request specific number of years (10-15 years typical for medical devices)
  • End-of-life (EOL) notification timeline: 18-24 months industry standard for medical
  • Last-time-buy process and timeline
  • Design data escrow, IP transfer, or third-party manufacturing options at EOL
  • What happens if your volumes are lower than projected?

Obsolescence Management Program:

  • Component lifecycle monitoring process (automated tools vs. manual quarterly reviews)
  • Proactive notification timeline for upcoming obsolescence: Minimum 6 months advance notice
  • Redesign responsibility and cost allocation (who manages, who pays?)
  • Component buy-ahead programs for long-lifecycle medical devices
  • Historical PCN frequency from supplier (request last 12 months)

Supply Chain Requirements:

  • Lead time commitments: prototype, pilot run, production (standard and expedited)
  • Minimum order quantities (MOQ) and flexibility for pilot runs
  • Safety stock or consignment inventory options
  • Dual-sourcing or multiple manufacturing location backup plans
  • Capacity commitment for volume ramps (can supplier scale with your growth?)

How to Structure a Medical Power Supply RFQ

Section 1: Technical Requirements

Specifications to Include:

  • Input: voltage range, frequency, power factor requirements
  • Output: voltage(s), current, power, regulation tolerance, ripple/noise limits
  • Isolation: Required MOPP/MOOP levels with specific voltage and creepage values
  • Applied part type: B, BF, or CF classification
  • Leakage current limits (normal condition and single fault condition)
  • Environmental: operating/storage temperature and humidity ranges, altitude
  • Mechanical: dimensions, mounting, connectors, cooling approach
  • Standards compliance: IEC 60601-1 (specify edition), IEC 60601-1-2 (Edition 4), regional variations
  • EMC requirements and essential performance criteria

Procurement Best Practice:

  • Require compliance matrix format so all supplier responses are directly comparable
  • Request specific test data and derating calculations, not just “meets specification” claims
  • Specify pass/fail criteria for all critical parameters

Section 2: Documentation Deliverables (Most Critical)

Design History File Documentation Package:

Specify exactly which documents you require:

  • Design input specifications
  • Design output specifications (detailed electrical specs, mechanical drawings)
  • Schematics and PCB layout documentation
  • Bill of materials with approved manufacturers
  • Design verification test plan and reports
  • Design validation test plan and reports
  • Design review records (meeting minutes, attendees, decisions)
  • Requirements traceability matrix
  • Design FMEA with risk scores and mitigations
  • Hazard analysis per ISO 14971
  • Design transfer documentation

Specify format requirements:

  • PDF reports with specific sections you need?
  • Editable source files (Word, Excel)?
  • Your company’s specific documentation templates?
  • Compliance with your document numbering system?

Specify delivery timeline:

  • At design freeze?
  • At production release?
  • Phased delivery (preliminary at DVT, final at production)?
  • How far in advance of production ramp?

Request sample documentation:

Ask for redacted sample DHF documentation from previous medical projects. This reveals true documentation capability better than any description.

Manufacturing Documentation Requirements:

  • Bill of materials format (compatible with your ERP system or supplier standard?)
  • Manufacturing process specifications—what detail level?
  • Process flow diagrams
  • Inspection and test procedures with acceptance criteria
  • Critical process parameters and control methods
  • Equipment calibration requirements

Critical question for procurement:

Will supplier provide camera-ready DMR content formatted for your QMS, or raw data requiring your team to reformat and structure?

Test Reports and Certifications:

  • Complete test reports from accredited laboratories (not just certificates of compliance)
  • Specify required laboratory accreditations: A2LA, NVLAP, TÜV, UL, etc.
  • Delivery timeline: how far in advance of production release?
  • Annual re-testing or ongoing compliance certification requirements?
  • Who maintains certificates and provides updates?

Risk Management Documentation:

  • Design FMEA detail level required (full analysis or summary?)
  • Hazard analysis format (ISO 14971 standard structure?)
  • How supplier’s risk documentation integrates with your device-level risk analysis
  • Process FMEA requirements
  • Request sample risk documentation from similar project

Section 3: NRE Proposal Requirements

How to manage medical power supply NRE costs:

Suppliers must break down total NRE cost by major work packages:

  • Engineering design effort (hours and rates or lump sum with justification)
  • Prototype fabrication (number of units, iterations included)
  • Design verification testing (what tests, how many samples)
  • Design validation testing (simulated use conditions, sample size)
  • Compliance testing (IEC 60601-1, IEC 60601-1-2 EMC at accredited lab)
  • Documentation package preparation (must be explicitly included and priced)
  • Manufacturing setup and FAI (tooling, production line setup, first article)
  • Project management (design reviews, status meetings, coordination)

Milestone Structure with Deliverables:

MilestoneDeliverablesTypical Timeline
Kickoff & Design ReviewRequirements review, design concept approvalWeek 0-4
Prototype DeliveryWorking prototypes for evaluationWeek 8-16
Design Verification CompleteDVT test reports, design review approvalWeek 16-24
Validation & Compliance Testing CompleteDV reports, IEC 60601-1/EMC test reportsWeek 24-40
Production Release & DocumentationFinal documentation package, production approvalWeek 40-52

Timeline Requirements:

Request detailed Gantt chart or project schedule showing: design review and specification freeze date, prototype delivery milestone, DVT completion and review, compliance testing at accredited laboratory, design validation completion, production release and documentation delivery, and customer review and approval periods built into schedule.

Industry benchmarks for medical power supply development:

  • Simple designs (modifications to existing platform): 6-9 months
  • Complex custom designs: 12-18 months from kickoff to production release
  • Beware timelines that seem too aggressive they indicate insufficient margin for iterations

NRE Terms to Address:

  • IP ownership: Who owns the design upon NRE completion?
  • Cancellation terms: What happens if project is cancelled mid-development?
  • Scope change process: How are design changes handled and priced? Hourly rates? Change order approval process?
  • Warranty on NRE deliverables: Design must meet all specifications; documentation must be complete and audit-ready

Section 4: Production Pricing and Commercial Terms

Pricing Structure Requirements:

Request unit pricing at minimum 3-4 volume tiers spanning your expected range:

  • Low volume tier (pilot runs): 100-500 units
  • Medium volume tier: 1,000-5,000 units
  • High volume tier: 10,000+ units
  • Maximum expected volume tier

Additional pricing elements:

  • Volume discount structure (must be achievable thresholds, not aspirational)
  • Price protection period: 12-24 months from quote date (critical during 2-3 year development cycle)
  • Annual price adjustment mechanism: CPI-based, negotiated annually, or fixed?
  • Minimum order quantities at each pricing tier
  • Tooling costs or amortization if applicable for custom mechanical components

Lead Time Commitments:

  • Prototype lead time from purchase order
  • Pilot run lead time (first production quantities)
  • Standard production lead time
  • Expedited lead time and premium pricing
  • Lead time for design changes during development phase
  • Lead time stability commitment (will quoted lead times hold or fluctuate with market conditions?)

Order and Delivery Terms:

  • Minimum order quantities and order frequency flexibility (quarterly, monthly, on-demand)
  • Partial shipment options for large orders
  • Packaging and labeling requirements (customer-specific labels, lot codes, barcoding, anti-static packaging)
  • Delivery terms (FOB origin, DDP, etc.)
  • Shipping methods and freight responsibility
  • Delivery performance guarantees

Section 5: Quality and Lifecycle Management

Product Change Notification (PCN) Process:

  • Notification timeline for component or process changes: 90-120 days minimum (negotiate 180 days for medical if possible)
  • Types of changes requiring customer approval vs. notification only
  • Last-time-buy notification and process
  • Change implementation procedure (phased transition, qualification lots, hard cutover date)
  • Customer right to approve or reject changes
  • Supplier responsibility to maintain regulatory compliance through all changes
  • Documentation update requirements for changes

Obsolescence Management Program:

Critical questions for suppliers:

QuestionWhy It Matters
Do you have documented proactive component monitoring or reactive-only process?Proactive prevents surprises; reactive means crisis management
What tools do you use for lifecycle tracking?Automated tools catch obsolescence earlier than manual reviews
Can you provide examples of obsolescence management for other medical customers?Track record proves capability
What’s your typical PCN lead time?90 days minimum, but best suppliers offer 120-180 for medical
Who pays for redesign due to component obsolescence?Cost allocation must be clear upfront
Do you offer component buy-ahead programs?Allows purchasing long-term inventory at current price

Long-Term Availability Commitment:

  • Minimum guaranteed production period: Request specific number of years in contract (10-15 years typical)
  • End-of-life notification period: 18-24 months for medical devices (negotiate as long as possible)
  • Last-time-buy opportunity and timeline (6-12 months typically)
  • What happens if your volumes are significantly lower than projected? (Does supplier reserve right to discontinue?)
  • Design data escrow or IP transfer options at end-of-life
  • Continued manufacturing options through third-party manufacturers

Supplier Quality Agreement (SQA) Elements:

  • Document control and revision management procedures
  • Certificate of Conformance (CoC) requirements with each shipment
  • Nonconformance notification and corrective action (CAPA) process
  • Annual product quality review process (required for medical device SQAs)
  • Audit rights and frequency (supplier should expect annual or bi-annual audits)
  • Regulatory change notification (if IEC 60601 standards change, how does supplier address?)

Section 6: Supplier Qualification Information

ISO 13485 Certification Verification:

Request from supplier:

  • Copy of current ISO 13485 certificate
  • Verify scope includes both design AND manufacturing (some certificates cover manufacturing only)
  • Name of registrar (accredited certification body)
  • Most recent audit findings summary (shows compliance maturity and any nonconformances)
  • Next scheduled surveillance audit date

Medical Device Experience:

  • Number of IEC 60601-1 certified power supply designs currently in production
  • References from at least 3 medical device OEM customers (with contact information)
  • Experience with FDA audits (findings and corrective actions)
  • Experience with Notified Body audits for CE marking (findings and corrective actions)
  • Years of experience specifically in medical power supply design and manufacturing
  • Percentage of revenue from medical device customers (indicates commitment to medical market)

Supply Chain and Business Stability:

  • Manufacturing locations (single site = risk; multiple facilities = resilience)
  • Financial stability indicators: D&B rating, years in business, ownership structure
  • Supply chain resilience: component sourcing strategy, authorized distributor relationships, component inventory management
  • Business continuity and disaster recovery plans
  • Recent capacity expansions or contractions (indicates business trajectory)

Quality Metrics:

Request actual performance data:

  • DPPM (defects per million) from production (past 12 months)
  • On-time delivery performance percentage (past 12 months)
  • Customer return rate or field failure rate
  • Average time to resolve field failures (RMA turnaround)
  • Corrective action closure rate and timeline

Section 7: RFQ Timeline and Evaluation Process

Clear Timeline:

  • RFQ issue date
  • Deadline for supplier questions (allow time for clarifications)
  • Response deadline
  • Technical and commercial evaluation period
  • Supplier presentations/interviews (top 2-3 candidates)
  • Selection notification
  • Contract negotiation timeline
  • Target project kickoff date

Evaluation Criteria Transparency:

Communicate weighting to suppliers upfront:

CriteriaWeightWhat You’re Evaluating
Technical Compliance30%Meets all specifications, appropriate design approach, quality of technical proposal
Documentation & Regulatory Maturity25%ISO 13485 scope, DHF/DMR deliverables quality, medical device experience, audit readiness
NRE Value & Commercial Terms20%NRE scope completeness, pricing competitiveness, IP terms, timeline realism
Lifecycle & Supply Chain Capability15%Obsolescence management maturity, long-term availability commitment, supply chain resilience
Quality & References10%Quality metrics, reference feedback, audit history

Required Response Format:

  • Technical compliance matrix (point-by-point response to all technical requirements)
  • NRE proposal with detailed work package breakdown
  • Production pricing at all requested volume tiers with lead times
  • Documentation deliverables description (specific documents, formats, timelines)
  • Quality system overview (ISO 13485 certificate, audit summary, quality metrics)
  • References and medical device experience summary
  • Company background and financial stability information

How to Evaluate Medical Power Supply Supplier Responses

Documentation Capability Assessment

Quality of Proposed Documentation Package:

Look for these green flags:

  • Detailed list of specific documents supplier will deliver (not vague “all necessary documentation”)
  • Document formats clearly specified and aligned with your stated needs
  • Delivery timeline realistic and aligned with project milestones
  • Sample documentation provided from previous medical projects
  • Supplier asked detailed questions about your documentation format preferences during Q&A
  • Understanding of DHF vs. DMR distinction demonstrated in response

Watch for these red flags:

  • Vague statements like “we provide all necessary documentation” without specifics
  • Documentation listed as separate/additional cost not included in NRE
  • No sample documentation provided when requested
  • Delivery timeline shows documentation after production release (too late)
  • Supplier didn’t ask any questions about documentation requirements (shows lack of experience)

Documentation Risk Assessment:

Contact references and ask specifically:

  • Did supplier deliver complete, audit-ready documentation on promised timeline?
  • Did documentation pass FDA or Notified Body audits without major revisions?
  • Was documentation formatted appropriately for your DHF/DMR or did you have to reformat?
  • How responsive was supplier to documentation questions and revision requests?
  • Would you use this supplier again for a new medical device project?

NRE Evaluation: Value Not Just Cost

Cost of custom medical power supply development – What’s reasonable:

Typical NRE ranges by complexity:

  • Simple modifications to existing medical platform: $15,000-$40,000
  • Semi-custom design with new mechanical/electrical configuration: $40,000-$75,000
  • Fully custom design for unique requirements: $75,000-$150,000+

NRE Scope Completeness Check:

Does supplier’s breakdown include all these elements:

  • Engineering design effort with estimated hours or clear deliverables
  • Prototype fabrication with specific number of units and iterations
  • Design verification testing with test list and sample quantities
  • Design validation testing under simulated use conditions
  • Compliance testing at accredited lab (IEC 60601-1, EMC) with test costs
  • Documentation package preparation explicitly included and priced
  • Manufacturing setup, tooling (if needed), and first article inspection
  • Project management effort (design reviews, status meetings)

Red flags indicating hidden costs:

  • Lump-sum NRE without detailed breakdown
  • Documentation listed as “additional” or “to be quoted separately”
  • Testing costs marked “TBD” or “extra”
  • Tooling costs not addressed when custom mechanical parts required
  • Re-testing costs “not included” when design iterations are expected

NRE Timeline Realism:

Evaluate proposed timeline against industry benchmarks:

Development PhaseReasonable DurationRed Flag Duration
Design review to prototype8-12 weeks<6 weeks (too fast) or >16 weeks (too slow)
Prototype delivery to DVT complete8-12 weeks<6 weeks (insufficient testing)
DVT complete to compliance testing8-16 weeks<6 weeks (no margin for re-test)
Compliance testing to production release4-8 weeks<2 weeks (documentation rushed)
Total: Simple design6-9 months<4 months or >12 months
Total: Complex custom12-18 months<9 months or >24 months

Timeline must include: customer review periods for design reviews and prototype evaluation, margin for design iterations (rarely perfect first time), re-testing contingency if compliance testing identifies issues, and documentation preparation and review time.

Reference Check Focus Areas

Medical power supply supplier evaluation criteria – What to ask references:

  • Documentation Quality: Did supplier deliver complete, audit-ready documentation on committed timeline?
  • NRE Experience: Did project stay within original NRE scope and budget? Were there surprise costs?
  • Communication: How responsive is supplier to technical questions? Proactive or reactive?
  • Schedule Performance: Did supplier meet milestone dates? How did they handle delays?
  • Production Quality: What are your actual DPPM rates? Field failure rates?
  • Change Management: How have they handled component obsolescence? PCN lead times?
  • Audit Performance: Has supplier been audited by FDA or Notified Body? Any findings?

Key Contract Terms for Medical Power Supply Programs

NRE Agreement Essentials

Scope Protection:

  • Detailed statement of work (SOW) listing all NRE deliverables by name
  • Design specification freeze process (when does scope officially lock?)
  • Change order process: how are requirement changes handled and priced?
  • Deliverable acceptance criteria (what defines “complete” and “acceptable”?)
  • Customer approval requirements at each milestone

Intellectual Property:

  • Design ownership clearly defined (full custom: customer owns; semi-custom: joint; platform: supplier owns)
  • Right to license design to alternate manufacturers if needed
  • Design data escrow provisions if supplier goes out of business
  • Confidentiality and non-disclosure terms

Timeline and Performance:

  • Milestone dates with specific deliverables
  • Remedies for schedule delays
  • Customer review and approval periods built into schedule
  • Force majeure provisions
  • Options to accelerate schedule if needed (and cost impact)

Production Supply Agreement Essentials

Pricing Terms:

  • Firm pricing period: 12-24 months from contract signature
  • Price adjustment mechanism after firm period (CPI-based, negotiated annually, or fixed)
  • Volume commitment requirements (if any) to maintain pricing tiers
  • Most-favored-customer clause (ensures you get supplier’s best pricing)

Lead Time and Capacity:

  • Standard lead time commitment in weeks
  • Expedite options and associated premium pricing
  • Capacity allocation during industry shortages (medical priority vs. commercial)
  • Minimum and maximum order quantities
  • Order frequency flexibility (quarterly, monthly, weekly, on-demand)
  • Forecast requirements and commitment horizons

Quality and Compliance:

  • Reference to Supplier Quality Agreement (SQA)
  • Certificate of Conformance (CoC) required with each shipment
  • Lot traceability requirements (lot codes, date codes, serial numbers)
  • Audit rights: frequency, scope
  • Regulatory compliance warranty (warrants compliance with IEC 60601-1, ISO 13485)
  • Product liability indemnification and insurance requirements
  • Recall cooperation and notification obligations

Lifecycle Management Terms

Product Change Notification (PCN) Process:

  • Minimum notification period: 90-120 days standard, negotiate 180 days for medical
  • Types of changes requiring customer approval vs. notification only
  • Last-time-buy process: notification timeline, minimum order quantities, pricing
  • Customer right to approve or reject proposed changes
  • Supplier responsibility to maintain regulatory compliance through all changes
  • Documentation update requirements for changes

Obsolescence Management:

  • Component lifecycle monitoring obligation (quarterly reviews minimum)
  • Proactive obsolescence notification: Minimum 6 months advance notice (12-18 months preferred)
  • Redesign responsibility and cost allocation
  • Component buy-ahead option terms

Long-Term Availability:

  • Minimum production commitment: Specify number of years in contract (10-15 years typical)
  • End-of-life (EOL) notification period: 18-24 months for medical devices
  • Last-time-buy opportunity: 6-12 month window after EOL notice
  • Conditions under which supplier may discontinue
  • Design data transfer or escrow options

Managing Supplier Relationships Post-Award

Development Phase Management

Regular Cadence:

  • Bi-weekly or monthly project review meetings
  • Clear escalation path for issues: technical, schedule, commercial
  • Decision log maintained (tracks requirement changes and approvals)
  • Risk register (tracks program risks, mitigations, owners, status)

Documentation Tracking:

  • Maintain documentation deliverable tracker (what’s due when, what’s been received, what’s approved)
  • Review documentation incrementally as delivered (don’t wait until final delivery to find gaps)
  • Provide feedback on documentation format and content early in program
  • Track documentation revisions and version control
  • Ensure documentation ties to your DHF/DMR structure

Production Phase Management

Performance Monitoring (Monthly Scorecard):

MetricTargetTracking Method
On-Time Delivery≥95%Track promised vs. actual delivery dates
Quality (DPPM)<500 ppmIncoming inspection defect tracking
Field Failures<100 ppmRMA tracking and root cause analysis
Lead Time Stability±10% of quoteCompare actual to quoted lead times
Price Variance0% during protectionCompare invoices to contract pricing
PCN Lead Time≥90 daysTrack notification to implementation dates

Regular Business Reviews:

  • Quarterly business reviews (QBRs) covering performance, forecast, quality, changes
  • Annual product quality reviews (required for medical device SQAs)
  • Forecast reviews (provide rolling forecast to help supplier plan capacity)
  • Cost reduction collaboration (continuous improvement initiatives)

Relationship Health Indicators:

Green Flags (Healthy Partnership):

  • Proactive communication about potential issues before they impact schedule
  • On-time delivery consistently meeting 95%+ target
  • Quality metrics stable or improving over time
  • Collaborative problem-solving when issues arise
  • Obsolescence notifications 6-12 months in advance (not last minute)

Red Flags (Activate Contingency Planning):

  • Missed deliveries without advance warning
  • Quality escapes reaching your customers or end users
  • Unresponsive to quality issues or slow on corrective actions
  • Surprise EOL notifications without transition plan
  • Financial distress: layoffs, facility closures, supplier payment issues

Conclusion: Partnership for Program Success

Successful medical power supply procurement requires comprehensive RFQ structure addressing technical specifications, documentation deliverables, commercial terms, and long-term lifecycle management. The RFQ process establishes the foundation for a 10-15 year supplier partnership that extends far beyond a simple purchase order.

Critical success factors:

  • Documentation capability evaluation beyond technical compliance audit-ready DHF/DMR packages are non-negotiable
  • Clear NRE scope definition preventing disputes and budget overruns through detailed deliverable specification
  • Rigorous supplier assessment including reference checks specifically about documentation delivery and NRE experience
  • Strong lifecycle contract terms protecting long-term availability and proactive obsolescence management
  • Active supplier relationship management throughout product lifecycle with performance monitoring and regular business reviews

Horizon PSS Approach to Medical Device Partnerships

Horizon PSS brings decades of experience supporting medical device manufacturers with:

Transparent NRE Scoping:

  • Detailed work package breakdowns with clear deliverables
  • Realistic timelines based on design complexity
  • Documentation package preparation explicitly included
  • Milestone structure tied to meaningful completions

Audit-Ready Documentation:

  • DHF packages structured for FDA and Notified Body compliance
  • DMR documentation formatted for seamless QMS integration
  • ISO 13485 quality management system with mature design controls
  • Risk management files integrated with customer device-level analysis

Lifecycle Commitment:

  • Proactive obsolescence management with 120-180 day PCN lead times
  • Component lifecycle monitoring for long-lifecycle medical programs
  • Configuration control discipline with robust change management
  • Long-term availability commitments in writing

Program-Focused Partnership:

  • Not transactional vendor relationship but development partner
  • Collaborative problem-solving throughout product lifecycle
  • Regulatory expertise specific to medical power supply requirements
  • Supply chain resilience with multiple manufacturing capabilities

Next Steps

Contact Horizon PSS to discuss your medical power supply procurement requirements, review our ISO 13485 quality management system, or explore our medical device case studies.

Horizon PSS

Custom and Semi-Custom Power Systems for Mission-Critical Medical Applications