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Design Thinking 101

Design Thinking 101

Dawan Stanford

Design Thinking 101 is part of how Fluid Hive helps people think and solve like a designer. You'll hear designers' stories, lessons, ideas, resources, and tips. Our guests share insights into delivering change and results with design thinking, service design, behavioral design, user experience design and more, in business, social innovation, education, design, government, healthcare and other fields.
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Top 10 Design Thinking 101 Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best Design Thinking 101 episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to Design Thinking 101 for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite Design Thinking 101 episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

David Dylan Thomas is the author of Design for Cognitive Bias and the creator and host of the Cognitive Bias podcast. Dave has consulted with major clients in entertainment, healthcare, publishing, finance, and retail. As the founder and CEO of David Dylan Thomas, LLC, he offers workshops and presentations on inclusive design and the role of bias in making decisions. We talk about cognitive bias, ethics, and dreaming the future of design.

Listen to learn about:

>> How cognitive biases affect the way we think and design >> Inclusive design >> David’s Assumption Audit >> How participatory design shifts power >> Why businesses can struggle with ethics >> Where should we go in the future of design?

Our Guest

David Dylan Thomas, author of Design for Cognitive Bias, creator and host of The Cognitive Bias Podcast, and a twenty-year practitioner of content strategy and UX, has consulted major clients in entertainment, healthcare, publishing, finance, and retail. As the founder and CEO of David Dylan Thomas, LLC he offers workshops and presentations on inclusive design and the role of bias in making decisions. He has presented at TEDNYC, SXSW Interactive, Confab, Button, An Event Apart, UX Copenhagen, UX Days Tokyo, and more on topics at the intersection of bias, design, and social justice.

Show Highlights

[01:51] How Iris Bohnet’s talk, What Works: Gender Equality By Design helped David connect his work in UX/content strategy with cognitive bias. [02:28] The role of pattern recognition in racial and gender discrimination. [03:20] How David started learning about cognitive biases and starting the Cognitive Bias podcast. [03:59] Writing a book, and shifting his consulting into inclusive design and designing for cognitive bias. [05:37] Why it’s important for designers to slow down and take time to think about how cognitive biases may be affecting the design decisions they are making. [07:29] David’s advice for those wanting to start to learn about cognitive bias and inclusive design. [07:47] Using what you value most as a north star when designing. [08:40] David’s “assumption audit” five-question exercise to do before starting a project. [10:56] Two places where a lot of people struggle when it comes to inclusive design. [13:18] Giving a voice and power to the people you are designing for. [15:17] Dawan mentions the fear of starting, and the need for discomfort training. [15:42] David mentions Mike Monteiro, who talks about needing to be able to wrestle with your discomfort. [18:33] A look at the problems with, and ethics of, collecting personal data. [19:33] It’s always best to think about inclusivity and cognitive biases as early as possible in a project, but at least before you take an expensive step. [21:21] David offers a great question for an applicant to ask in a job interview. [23:26] Facebook’s natural engagement graph, and why businesses can struggle with ethics. [28:29] How people approach design research and ethics is changing. [28:44] Participatory design’s power map. [29:43] Looking at the city of Philadelphia’s work with the Office of Homeless Services. [31:46] Connecting the locus of power to the locus of insight. [32:35] David talks about how to get leadership buy-in to what you’re designing. [36:14] How much of what we’re using today should we take into the future of design? [38:26] Envisioning a world outside of ownership. [39:34] Designing for sharing. [41:22] Resources David recommends for people wanting to learn more. [41:57] We can design something better for the future.

Links

David on Twitter David on LinkedIn David’s website Design for cognitive bias: Using mental shortcuts for good instead of evil, presentation for UX New Zealand 2020 The Cognitive Bias podcast Design x David Dylan Thomas interview on DxU The Content Strategy Podcast Ep 48: David Dylan Thomas - Understanding design, content and bias Iris Bohnet | What Works: Gender Equality by Design | SXSW Interactive 2016 Project Inkblot Weekly Fluctuations in Risk Tolerance and Voting Behaviour, by J.G. Sanders and Rob Jenkins Báyò Akómoláfé

Book Recommendations

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Hazel White is a designer and a visualizer. She creates simple visuals to help communicate complex ideas. We talk about how design and visualization combine to facilitate thinking, fuel solving, and create transformative change.

Listen to learn about:

>> How visualizations can help us communicate ideas >> Examples of what you can use visualizations for >> Hazel’s visualization projects and their impact >> Advice for those wanting to try creating their own visualizations >> Some tools and resources for those who want to create visualizations

Our Guest

Hazel White is a designer and educator who specializes in creating visuals that simplify complex information.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, she collaborated with healthcare experts to rapidly distill complex information into simple and memorable visuals for frontline staff in hospitals and care homes.

Currently, she is working on visuals of palliative care guidelines for health and care staff, visually recording a sports governing body’s transformation program, and developing internal documentation for a prominent cultural organization.

Previously, Hazel was Founding Director of Open Change - a company which supported organizations to navigate change using Design Thinking. Clients included government, healthcare and national cultural organizations in the UK and Europe.

Hazel spent two decades teaching design in Universities in the UK and South Korea.She is an Associate of the UK Design Council.

Show Highlights

[00:53] Dawan thanks Hazel for the incredible visualization she created for podcast conversation (download it here). [01:46] Hazel’s path from design thinking to visualization. [02:13] Discovering that drawing helped her remember things, such as lectures, better. [03:33] Visualizations are helpful for everyone’s memory recall. [04:49] Hazel gives one example from the healthcare industry of the powerful impact using visualizations has had on those she’s worked with. [08:15] How the pandemic increased the need for getting important information out quickly while also ensuring people understood it. [09:12] Hazel’s work on a series of COVID-19 related visualizations for hospital staff. [12:51] The value of using visualizations in a work environment. [13:40] Working on the Scottish Government’s Framework for Care for Adults in Care Homes [16:22] Visualizations can be used to capture ideas and themes during live workshops and meetings. [17:22] Using visualizations to map out how things interrelate and to see things changing over time. [18:01] Visualizations can help make complex information more accessible. [19:03] Visuals are something that people will remember. [21:04] How working with visualizations has changed how Hazel thinks and works. [23:50] Creating your own visuals, and when to hire a professional. [26:04] Advice for people who want to give creating visualizations a try, but who aren’t “good” at drawing. [27:50] The importance of feedback and collaboration during the creation process. [29:49] The positive feedback Hazel has gotten about her work. [32:37] Dawan gives listeners a visualization challenge. [33:29] Hazel offers tools and resources listeners can use while doing their challenge. [34:51] Drawing visualizations on Magic Whiteboard. [37:35] Thinking about visualizations and accessibility.

Links

Hazel on Twitter Hazel on LinkedIn Hazel White Design Ole Qvist-Sørensen: Draw More, together Magic Whiteboard Scriberia Eva-Lotta Lamm, Sketchnoting: Communicate with Visual Notes

Book Recommendations

Visual Collaboration: A Powerful Toolkit for Improving Meetings, Projects, and Processes, by Loa Baastrup and Ole Qvist-Sørensen

Other Design Thinking 101 Episodes You Might Like

A Designer’s Journey into Designing for Health and Healthcare with Lorna Ross — DT101 E45 Designing for Healthcare vs Sick Care + The Emergency Design Collective — DT101 E52 Civic Design + Innovation Ops + System Design with Ryann Hoffman — DT101 E62

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Amy Heymans is Mad*Pow’s Chief Experience Officer and one its foundersof. We talk about how the practice of design is evolving, the emerging role of behavior design, purpose-driven design, and making sure the problems designers are asked to solve connect to business outcomes. Show Host: Dawan Stanford

Show Summary

A love of art led Amy into a career as a designer. She started in web design during the dot-com bubble where she became passionate about user research, usability, and user experience. After the bubble burst, she began to freelance, working in partnership with a former colleague. One project led to another, and the two continued to work together until, eventually, they founded Mad*Pow, fueled by Amy’s vision of design being used to improve the human condition.

Their passion for creating positive change transformed them into healthcare innovation pioneers. Since its inception, Mad*Pow has been at the forefront of helping businesses across multiple industries create human-centered and purpose-driven solutions using design thinking, strategic design, and behavioral change design.

Amy offers listeners her insight into the way design is currently evolving, what the future of design will look like, and how behavior change design is an integral part of that evolution.

Listen in to learn more about:

>> The evolution of design thinking and purpose-driven design>> Innovation in healthcare>> How designers are shaping business model design>> The business environment necessary for long-term innovation success>> Behavior change design — what it is, and how it’s changing design

Our Guest

Amy believes that design can help improve the human condition. It was with that mission and vision that she founded Mad*Pow in 2000. Amy plays an essential role in Mad*Pow’s visualization of a changed healthcare system in the United States. Her work with companies like Aetna, CVS, McKesson, and Fidelity has helped them improve the experiences their patients and customers have with them, leverage design to drive change, and facilitate human-centric innovation. As the chief instigator behind Mad*Pow’sHealthcare Experience Design Conference—now in its fifth year and expanded and rebranded as HxRefactored—Amy has successfully connected and networked disparate parts of a challenging and siloed system.

As a speaker, Amy shares her vision and methodology at influential events such as Design Management Institute, UXPA, IA Summit, Partners Center for Connected Health Symposium, Stanford MedicineX, Health 2.0, and HIMSS.

With her partners Will Powley and Bradley Honeyman, Amy’s grown Mad*Pow’s presence, client base, and revenue, leading to Mad*Pow’s 2009 recognition as one of Inc. 500’s fastest growing privately held companies. Mass High Tech, which named her one of its 2009 Women to Watch, has recognized Amy’s passion, energy, and commitment, and she’s been acknowledged as one of Boston’s “40 Under 40” by the Boston Business Journal for 2014. She supports the vision and mission of An Orphan’s Dream, a nonprofit organization offering an oasis for AIDS-orphaned children in Gachoka, Kenya.

Show Highlights

[02:02] Amy’s love of art led her to a career in design.[03:19] Freelancing and co-founding Mad*Pow.[04:30] How design work has changed and evolved over the years.[04:55] Big brands can be thanked for putting design front and center.[06:04] Behavior change design is becoming more prominent in design now.[06:30] Purpose-driven design: finding the balance between what a business wants to achieve and what their customers or clients want to achieve.[07:16] The ways Amy approaches the topic of purpose-driven design with potential clients.[08:12] Banks are now recognizing the need for purpose-driven design in their industry.[09:53] The pre-pandemic state of health systems and behavioral design.[10:24] Health systems had begun moving towards value-based care.[11:40] There is no “silver bullet” tech innovation that will fix our healthcare systems.[12:55] Amy talks about the gaps between the wants and goals of health insurance companies, healthcare systems, and their patients.[13:20] Amy sees collaboration between groups of companies as the next frontier in healthcare innovation.[14:32] Focus of design has shifted to working directly with a business to tailor solutions.[15:13] How design is helping to innovate business models and strategies.[15:49] Business design is a blend of design thinking and business strategy.[17:24] The environment that’s needed in an organization for a project to succeed and thrive long-term.[19:48] Amy’s advice to business leaders considering working with a design firm.[20:10] The importance of understanding the problem space before jumping to a solution.[21:53] Why Amy believes the future of design is behavior change design.[23:23] How behavioral science and behavioral design is changing the field of de...

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Nick Dawson is the co-organizer of the Emergency Design Collective. In today’s episode, we talk about healthcare innovation labs, how to think about opportunities in healthcare, healthcare versus sick care, and launching the EDC to support the COVID-19 response. Show Host: Dawan Stanford

Show Summary

Nick Dawson grew up with a father who worked in healthcare and hospitals. As he entered college, he was convinced that he absolutely didn’t want to work in the same field. But the technology used in the local hospital intrigued and interested him enough to accept an internship in the IT department there. While immersed in how hospitals work, Nick discovered his interest in complex systems and their challenges. His internship turned into a lifelong career that led him into design and innovation for healthcare.

While working as a healthcare performance improvement consultant for a large healthcare conglomerate, Nick needed to travel frequently by air. During his business travel, he witnessed a failing airline’s poor treatment of its employees; this was the nascence of his interest in the idea of re-designing healthcare’s patient and staff experiences. He realized that experience is something people and organizations must always create with intention and thought, and something that must be centered on those who are living and working in the experience.

Experience design, healthcare and the ability to wrestle with complexity drives his work. Examples include designing the Johns Hopkins Sibley Innovation Hub, and his recent co-founding of the Emergency Design Collective, which focuses on re-thinking how we approach healthcare, helping businesses and organizations design their work spaces to support the health and wellbeing of their employees, and on creating a “public health design” core curriculum.

Listen in to learn more about:

>> The challenges of designing for innovation in hospital environments>> Designing the Johns Hopkins Sibley Innovation Hub>> The unique collaborative aspects of clinical hospital teams>> Creating a flexible work environment and power dynamic in teams>> The “product” of healthcare>> How everything in our life is connected to, and has an influence on, our health>> The social determinants of health>> The Emergency Design Collective and its work>> Ways to rethink how we work and function in order to design for good health

Our Guest

Nick Dawson has been at the forefront of bringing design innovation to healthcare. He started and led the design innovation program at Johns Hopkins before joining Kaiser Permanente to lead innovation nationally. Nick chaired the Medicine X program in the Stanford school of Medicine until 2019 and worked with the Obama White House to bring patient-centered design to policy making and healthcare priorities. In April 2020, Nick left KP to co-found the Emergency Design Collective — a group of doctors, designers and public health experts using design to respond to urgent public health crises.

Show Highlights

[03:00] Nick’s start in healthcare and design.[04:19] Nick discovers his interest in complex systems problems.[04:28] How a hospital is like a miniature city.[05:23] Nick’s witnessing of an airline’s financial failure leads to a revelation about experience.[09:00] Learning from and listening to patients about what they need and want from their healthcare.[10:57] Why it can be challenging to innovate in healthcare.[11:29] Why healthcare is a risk-averse industry.[12:05] Nick’s focus on re-centering the work from the hospital to the communities, patients, and staff it serves.[12:51] Advice for overcoming people’s resistance to change.[13:31] The dilemma of how to help people embrace change and innovation instead of resisting it.[15:00] How hospital staff reacted to the launching of the Johns Hopkins Sibley Innovation Hub.[17:15] Nick talks about building the Sibley Innovation Hub team and working to create a welcoming space.[18:27] The unique characteristics of teams and teamwork in the clinical hospital environment versus the management side of healthcare.[19:39] How Nick disseminated power among his team members.[21:59] Nick’s thoughts on the “product” of healthcare.[22:50] The concept of a social needs emergency room existing upstream of clinical emergency rooms.[23:05] The interconnectedness of every part of our life with our health.[23:20] The social determinants of health.[24:18] What it means to design “upstream” of healthcare.[27:23] Some opportunities for people who want to act and serve not just in response to the current COVID-19 crisis, but also in the future as systems begin to change.[28:07] The Emergency Design Collective and the “new normal.”[28:27] Nick’s thought on education and how it might change.[29:15] What might happen if every corporation started to think of itself as an H corp and prioritizing health?[29:30] How th...

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Today’s guest is Holly O'Driscoll, the founder and CEO of Ampersand Innovation, a boutique consultancy focusing on bringing more human-centered design, innovation, strategy, and leadership development to the world. During the conversation, you'll learn about intersections between innovation and leadership, designing and facilitating innovation teams, and insights into shaping organizational innovation. Host: Dawan Stanford.

Show Summary

Holly believes her journey into design began when she was kicked out of kindergarten after only two weeks (only to be promoted to first grade) for her precocious behavior. Later, in middle school, she started her own business, renting out pens and pencils to her fellow classmates. She’s continued pushing boundaries, asking difficult questions, and challenging assumptions.

Her undergraduate degree was in Chemistry, with her future plans aimed at going to medical school, but a chance interview with Proctor & Gamble on her college campus changed her career trajectory. She ended up getting an MBA and working at P&G for 22 years, traveling all around the world servicing plants, before moving into the corporate design organization in the company, which was still in its early stages. Holly’s introduction to design thinking would also come during her time at P&G, when she returned to work after maternity leave – and it changed her life. After that first training, Holly entered a rigorous design thinking training program co-developed by Stanford d.school. She would eventually take over P&G’s North American design thinking role, and two years later, she became the head of the company’s Global design thinking.

In 2018, Holly left P&G to start her own consultancy after numerous requests from business colleagues asking her to come and do the same team training and work she was doing for P&G. Now, she’s in the process of finding ways to transition her work into the virtual space while still maintaining the same thoughtful, meaningful experience that comes from an in-person event.

Listen in to learn more about:

>> The intersection between innovation and leadership>> How our “on demand” culture can create challenges when it comes to time expectations and design thinking>> Our society’s obsession with perfection and getting things right>> The two things Holly believes prevents innovation teams from achieving their goals>> How learning design thinking is like learning a new language>> The importance of the right mindset in an organization wanting to use design thinking>> The HIPPO concept>> What Holly considers when building teams>> The facilitation exercise Holly uses to build rapport and connection in a team>> When an organization really needs someone outside the org to facilitate a team

Our Guest

Holly O’Driscoll is an industry expert in the field of Design Thinking and human centered innovation. Throughout her 20+ year career, Holly has built a reputation as a master human centered innovation strategist, trainer and facilitator having led programs in more than 20 countries. She is the former Global Design Thinking Leader at Procter & Gamble, where she led more than 250 workshops, often at the request of C-suite executives. She is the founder and CEO of Ampersand Innovation, LLC; a Design Thinking and human centered innovation strategy consultancy.

Show Highlights

[02:20] Holly’s very early start into pushing boundaries and challenging assumptions.[05:05] The chance interview with Proctor & Gamble during college that changed Holly’s career plans.[07:43] Her introduction to design thinking.[09:00] Holly’s transition from P&G to starting her own consultancy and teaching at Rutgers.[11:50] The early challenges Holly faced while facilitating design thinking[13:00] Holly talks about some of today’s challenges for design thinking because of the “on demand” business culture.[14:50] Making design thinking part of a business’s everyday mindset.[17:37] Holly’s advice for building and leading a strong team.[19:04] The two things that can keep an innovation team from being able to solve tough problems.[20:50] How learning design thinking is a little like learning a language.[21:55] The importance of leaders providing opportunities, support, and space for people to practice their design thinking skills.[25:46] Holly talks about how mindset is a key to successful, sustainable design thinking in an organization.[28:00] Choosing curiosity and the sense of being on a learning journey over being right.[30:18] The HIPPO concept and how it can affect a team.[31:09] Key leadership qualities needed to create a safe space for innovators.[31:31] The correlation between inter-team relationships, social capital, and a team’s success.[32:49] The importance of thinking about mindset and social capital when building a team.[33:01] The things Holl...

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David and Mary Sherwin work with design teams in for-profit and nonprofit organizations via their consulting business, Ask The Sherwins, LLC. They’re also professors at the Pacific College of Art in the Design and Collaboration Program. In this episode, we go deep into designing teams, consider more effective ways to teach design and teams, and ways to make teams work when working remotely with Dawan Stanford, your podcast host.

Show Summary

David's background is in engineering and liberal arts. He graduated with an English degree, but had a side hustle doing graphic design. That’s where he discovered an interest in design. Much of his early design learning and education was accomplished by apprenticing at various design studios Then, he shifted into product and service design, and he worked in product development for some large software organizations.

Mary started in organizational development and content strategy, and then moved into teaching within the design discipline. Much of Mary's experience had been working with designers. Most of David's experience was from a designer's standpoint, working with people like Mary.

Mary and David realized that the work they were doing on their respective paths had a lot of synergy and that they each held half of the solution. They started teaching together seven years ago. Three years after that, they founded their company after students in a special graduate-level teamwork class told them they should start their own business, because this was something companies wanted their employees to learn.

Since starting Ask The Sherwins, Mary and David have discovered and developed the nuances of developing strong, well-functioning teams. From facilitating your new team at the start of the design process, to what to do when your team feels like it's falling apart, to working through cultural differences, Mary and David have robust processes for all of these team challenges. They discuss their management style, team-building exercises, and team maintenance practices on team design.

Listen in to learn

>> Why Mary and David’s ability to “professionally disagree” gives them an advantage when working with design clients>> Why their two different career paths gives two different perspectives on the design process>> About cultural biases, assumptions, and their role in design solutions>> Why Mary and David encourage students and professors to teach and learn from each other>> Advice on how to start your team>> Mary and David’s team facilitation process during their first meeting>> Team word tools to use when the team situation gets difficult>> When you should use behavioral questioning

Our Guests

David and Mary Sherwin are co-founders of Ask The Sherwins, LLC, a consulting and training firm that helps design organizations develop the capabilities they need for better product design and stronger cross-functional teamwork. They have recently coached product and service design teams and provided training around innovation best practices for organizations such as Philips Oral Healthcare, Tipping Point Community, The Purpose Project, Google UX Community and Culture, and Eventbrite. The Sherwins are also active in the design education space. They lead workshops in the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design’s Summer School and currently teach in the MFA in Collaborative Design program at PNCA. In their spare time, David and Mary have collaborated on three books, including their most recent, Turning People Into Teams.

Show Highlights

[02:15] Mary and David talk about their origin story and how they arrived where they are now in design. [04:26] How Mary’s experience in teaching played out in her design experience.[07:48] Components of a team from Mary and David’s perspective. [10:08] Prototyping for norms, teams and individual thinking.[11:08] Advice for starting a team off well.[11:46] The importance of having team members discuss their values and the behaviors they want to see in the team.[12:50] The Why’s and How’s of the Team Words card deck created by Mary and David.[16:55] How talking through values and behaviors at the beginning helps teams save time and deal with challenges and misunderstandings.[19:43] Ways a team’s “status quo” can create invisible walls and obstacles for new team members. [22: 35] What to do when everything that can go wrong with a team has gone wrong.[24:49] Habits to bring to your team to encourage connection and mutual support.[27:39] Why you should have a clear “etiquette” for your team.[28:53] How their consulting work influences what they teach.[30:38] Lessons they teach students when they deliberately break up a team.[33:56] Advice from Mary and David on how and who to hire or choose for a team. [35:35] When a design challenge as part of the interview process ca...

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Steve Portigal is the Principal of Portigal Consulting and an experienced user researcher who helps companies harness the strategic power of insights. He is the author of Interviewing Users: How to Uncover Compelling Insights. He also wrote Doorbells, Danger, and Dead Batteries: User Research War Stories. We talk about interviewing people, customer research, and storytelling with Dawan Stanford, your podcast host.

Show Summary

Steve started out in Human Computer Interaction (HCI), in the days before the World Wide Web and before the formal idea of user experience (UX) existed. He had a brief exposure to design as a profession through an article about industrial product design, and to the idea of bringing together people from many different disciplines to collaborate and create solutions to problems via another article about a project trying to determine how best to find a way to demarcate dangerous locations, like nuclear waste sites. These ideas planted seeds leading to his interest in design. Steve graduated with his Masters in HCI, had a summer internship in Silicon Valley, and eventually found a job in an industrial design consultancy to work on what was essentially proto-UX design with their software.

At the same time, this company was exploring ideas surrounding ethnographic research and the idea of uncovering product opportunities, and Steve managed to apprentice himself with the team, where he learned about organizing and finding connections within data. He also had the opportunity to develop his initial interviewing skills, which he continued to hone as he started his own consultancy focused on user research. Steve was one of the first people in the early 90’s to develop design processes for user experience and research.

We talk about Steve’s excitement for and interest in spending more time with stakeholders within a client’s organization. He has learned why a stakeholder’s perspective is essential in relation to the success of a project. He talks about creating “learning-ready” moments, how he helps people have these moments, and how learning and sharing the journey of learning affect learning retention.

Listen in to learn:

>> How Steve and others developed the design processes in the early stages of user experience and research >> How Steve’s skills, interests, and the work he does for his clients has evolved over the years>> When Steve knows he’s found a great client>> Why he believes that learning together is when change can happen>> Why understanding stakeholders gives better results with clients>> Being able to embrace realistic expectations of what you can accomplish

Our Guest

Steve Portigal is an experienced user researcher who helps companies to think and act strategically when innovating with user insights. Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, he is principal of Portigal Consulting and the author of two books: the classic Interviewing Users: How To Uncover Compelling Insights and, Doorbells, Danger, and Dead Batteries: User Research War Stories.

He's also the host of the Dollars to Donuts podcast, where he interviews people who lead user research in their organizations. Steve is an accomplished presenter who speaks about culture, innovation, and design at companies and conferences across the globe.

Show Highlights

[02:09] Steve talks about his origin story and his introduction to the ideas of design and user experience. [06:15] Steve’s first job at an industrial design consultancy.[08:15] Steve’s apprenticeship with the team exploring a nascent practice in what was basically user experience. [09:58] Many companies were exploring and experimenting with these new ideas around user research in the 90s, and how that led to the development of best practices and processes around the work.[13:05] Steve’s litmus test for a new client.[13:37] How Steve’s role and work started to shift and change.[15:40] The way in which Steve sets up expectations with new clients and spending time with the stakeholders in a client’s organization.[16:20] The value in spending as much time with stakeholders as with users to gain a deep understanding of their motivations and perceptions.[19:03] Repetitive patterns and questions Steve sees with clients.[22:28] Using storytelling to help explain concepts and share information, and to help move clients through shared experiences and discussions.[24:04] Separating the value of the research from any action that may take place.[28:15] The importance of the “Why” of user research.[30:39] How Steve’s practice has evolved and the scope of his work today, now that many companies have in-house user research and design teams.[35:05] Steve’s speciali...

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Tracey Williams, a Service Design Director for Absa Bank in South Africa, discusses learning service design on the job, growing design skills on her team, and building organizational service design standards with Dawan Stanford, your podcast host.

Show Summary

Tracey’s career didn’t begin in design; she started in financial services, and went through a graduate program focused on business targets and goals. She’d always had an interest in problem-solving, and while working at Absa, she got involved in numerous projects that she found new and exciting outside of her specific role. She had studied marketing, and found that much of the old-school marketing thinking aligned with some of the thinking in design spaces.

She submitted an idea to a social entrepreneurship course and was accepted. Tracey then proceeded to learn service design and design thinking as she led her team through development of the idea. Her biggest challenge during the project was using the tools of design, which were still new to her; she had to learn through doing, and through failure and then trying again. She learned that design is about looking at a problem from a different perspective.

Tracey hosted the first Absa Women Forum at the Wentworth Angels headquarters to celebrate the role of single mothers and women.

Listen in to learn:

>> How Tracey developed her design skills>> What service design skills she has learned on her job>> Why she was called a design “Padawan”>> Who Tracey is bringing onto her team for service design>> How Tracey is developing new designers at Absa>> What she wishes more people understood about her work>> How she protects her work from being devoured by the larger system >> Books Tracey used to learn service design on the job

Our Guest

Tracey is a designer with seven years of experience in financial services. She is currently a Service Design Director for the Absa Bank Design Office, where she has played a key role in establishing and demonstrating the value of Service Design. Her teams have worked across different areas of the business and engaged with several stakeholders along the way, including those in Relationship Banking, Business Banking, Card, and most recently, Home Loans.

She enjoys working with cross-functional teams to solve complex, wicked problems with solutions that address both customers' needs and meet the business objectives. Beyond the delivery of design work, she has a passion for developing young talent and worked with a colleague to start the first design graduate program at the bank focused on transforming and growing its future design leaders.

Show Highlights

[02:33] How Tracey became involved in banking projects early on in her career.[03:43] Tracey’s experiences in a social entrepreneurship course.[06:24] Tracey talks about her early challenges in working with service design.[10:30] Tracey talks about a design graduate program she co-founded with a colleague.[12:30] Her leadership team’s work to create a skills matrix for designers.[14:21] How Tracey is developing new designers to fit the strategic objectives of the bank. [16:20] Her work to create solid service design standards for the bank.[19:10] What she wishes others understood about service design.[20:39] The concept of “go slow to go fast” and making sure pacing is comfortable and sustainable.[23:13] How Tracey is able to prevent her project being devoured by the larger system. [25:46] The short term and long term views and value of service design.[30:09] How Tracey is working to better tell service design success stories to other staff at the bank, and also to the bank’s customers.[32:25] Ways other banks can use service design.[36:27] Maintaining quality within a larger team and keeping up with service design standards.[42:29] Books and resources that have helped Tracey during her journey.

Links

Tracey on LinkedIn Absa Bank SDN Conference 2019

Book Recommendations

Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, by Dan Ariely Thinking, Fast and Slow, by Daniel Kahneman Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions, by Dan Ariely Lean Startup: How Today’s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful...

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Sarah Doody is a user research experience designer and researcher. She's also the founder of Career Strategy Lab, a UX career coaching program. In 2011, she co-created the curriculum and taught for General Assembly's first 11-week UX intensive program in New York City. She has extensive experience doing experience design, product strategy, and user research for companies including Fatherly, Sling, Citi Bike, We Work, Domino Magazine, Tictail, the Muse, Dow Jones and more. She speaks at conferences and teaches workshops worldwide. Today, we talk about designing your career and user experience for small businesses.

Listen to learn about: >> Creating a career roadmap >> Career marketing materials and messaging >> The importance of stories and storytelling when interviewing Our GuestSarah Doody is the founder of Career Strategy LabTM, a program that helps UX and product professionals at all career stages navigate their job search and articulate their skills and experience through individualized and group coaching. She is also the host of the Career Strategy Lab podcast.

Since 2021, professionals who have worked with Sarah have increased their salaries by 40% on average and have been hired at prestigious brands such as Microsoft, Amazon, Salesforce, Nordstrom, Spotify, Blue Origin on average in 3.5 months. She has been featured as an expert in Forbes, Fast Company, Insider, Fox Business, and more.

Show Highlights [01:43] Sarah originally planned to have a career in neuroscience. [02:19] During a gap year, she ended up in graphic and web design instead, which led to a focus on information architecture. [2:50] From there, Sarah turned to product and user experience design and user research. [3:43] Launching her own consulting company. [04:40] How creating and teaching a workshop about building a design portfolio launched Sarah’s new career coaching business. [06:07] One mistake many make when it comes to their careers. [07:57] Sarah’s company helps people do research on themselves to help them find jobs and careers that fulfill them professionally and personally. [09:04] Being more intentional when thinking about your career. [10:47] Creating a career roadmap. [15:08] Sarah’s advice for those who are trying to figure out their next career moves. [15:30] The importance of business relationships. [18:01] The three core career marketing materials. [19:41] Focus on outcomes. [21:31] Tailoring messaging for the job you want next. [26:26] As a job candidate, you’re a product and companies hiring are your customers. [27:35] Researching companies before the interview. [29:16] Anders Ericsson and the 10,000 hour rule. [30:30] Using stories in interviews. [34:09] Think like a lawyer when interviewing. [39:16] How Sarah and her team work on projects. [42:02] Where to find out more about Sarah and her work. [43:27] Sarah’s last advice about career planning. Links Sarah on LinkedIn Sarah’s website Sarah on YouTube Sarah on Instagram Sarah on Medium Sarah on Forbes Sarah on Inside Design Sarah on UX Magazine Career Strategy Lab Career Strategy Podcast Sarah Doody on the democratization of UX and thinking like a designer 3 Signs Your Team Isn’t Doing Enough User Research The NN/g UX Podcast: Designing a UX Career The UX Growth Podcast, Season 2 Episode 12 People of Product: How to Finally Land a Job in UX DT 101 EpisodesUX + Design Teams with Nick Finck — DT101 E117 UX + Into, Through, and (Almost) Out of Design with Kara DeFrias — DT101 E103 UX Research + Research Teams + UX Camp DC with Glenette Clark — DT101 E80

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How many episodes does Design Thinking 101 have?

Design Thinking 101 currently has 142 episodes available.

What topics does Design Thinking 101 cover?

The podcast is about Learning, Management, Design, Podcasts, Arts and Business.

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The episode title 'A Designer's Pathway, Working with Clients, and Desing Thinking DC with Arty Rivera - DT101 E7' is the most popular.

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The average episode length on Design Thinking 101 is 47 minutes.

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Episodes of Design Thinking 101 are typically released every 14 days.

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The first episode of Design Thinking 101 was released on May 1, 2018.

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