Where it begins to slow down
It rarely starts with a big issue. It shows up in small, everyday situations:
●A routing detail that needs to be revisited
●The configuration isn’t fully clear anymore
●Minor changes lead to follow-up questions instead of quick answers
None of these are critical on their own, but often they don’t stay isolated. As projects grow, these details start to connect. Decisions depend on each other, and the work around harnessing becomes less about execution and more about coordination.
Where the effort actually moves
This is where the real cost appears. It’s not in building the harness itself. It’s in the attention it begins to require.
You start to see it in how time is spent:
●Engineering teams resolve minor details instead of focusing on development
●Production staff compensate for inconsistencies rather than following a stable process
●Crucial information sits scattered across people instead of in one clear location
Nothing is “broken,” but everything takes a bit longer. And at some point, the questions change. It’s no longer just “can we do this in-house?” It becomes: why does this take more time than expected or why does this keep coming back to us?
That is usually the moment when it becomes clear that harnessing has moved beyond what it was originally meant to be.
In-house harnessing doesn’t typically fail. It expands. And the hidden cost is not in the harness itself; it’s in how much attention it starts to absorb across the organization.
LAPP Harnessing Solutions
This is where LAPP Harnessing Solutions operates, taking on this layer of complexity so engineering and production teams can stay focused on building and scaling the system itself.