Can you elaborate on this?
Here is the spitballing, top of my head list of stuff for impacting esters (+/-). Basically all the stuff I had to memorize from Greg Casey's work. Look it up.
Yeast strain dependent - BAP2 gene and leucine uptake (+)
Ferment temp, higher (+) --> increasing temp towards end of fermentation with yeast flocculation (some yeasts) (+)
Pitch rate, lower (+)
Oygenation, higher (-)
Fermentation rousing (-)
High FAN/low unsaturated lipids (+) --> increase esters by addition of glucose or rice/sugar
Low FAN/high lipids (-) --> typical all malt worts (especially Euro malts)
Increased trub in fermentation (-)
Zinc (+)
Serial repitching (-)
Pitching in turbid wort (-)
Fermentation pressure (-)
High gravity wort (+) --> ethyl acetate
High maltose fermentations (-)
Undermodified malts (+)
High caramel malts (-)
Fermentation geometry
And my favorite two bits; propagating yeast in wort media high in glucose/fructose can increase ester development in subsequent generations. Also, "yeast are not indifferent to design and process change".... if a yeast is accustomed to a particular fermenter geometry/process and is then transferred to another fermentation environment, it will not behave the same nor produce the same fermentation flavor. Pretty much explains why all UK home brew strains never taste the same as the original, among other reasons. I worked at a brewery that went from shallow box fermenters to CCVs and flavor matching ale fermentations between the systems was nearly impossible. Courage struggled with this mightily for years.
Edit: Obviously, not all of these are better for total flavor quality.