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The
process of design thinking is a series of
steps for
gaining insights, setting objectives, generating options, testing strategies, and getting
feedback. |
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①
Set the Objectives
The first step in design thinking is defining the problem: What issue are you
trying to solve? Is this a symptom of a deeper problem?
Define the
problem you want to
solve creatively,
the
stretch goals you want to
achieve, and the desired outputs you want to generate. |
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②
Gain a Deeper Understanding of the Issues Involved
5-Whys. Use the
5-Why process, a question-asking method to explore the cause/effect
relationships underlying a particular problem.
Observation.
Observe people to uncover what comes naturally to them and
discover their
hidden needs.
Empathy.
Empathize with people to understand their experiences and
motivations...
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③
Ideate and Prototype
Having discovered the roots of the problem, look at them with new eyes. Think
like a beginner in order to jumpstart your curiosity and prevent any automatic
negative thoughts (ANTs) that tend to arise when you are contemplating solutions
to major challenges that involve making potentially big changes.
Generate ideas to establish features, functions, and any other elements that
will allow them to solve the problems. Ask 'Why? What If' questions.
Think outside the box to identify new solutions to the problem statement
you’ve created.
Think both inside-out and outside-in to understand how your new design will
be perceived by the consumers.
Play
simulation games with the most promising disruptive ideas to anticipate and
address implementation challenges and to
enhance your business design.
Produce some scaled down versions of the product or its specific features.
Learning from prototypes is most likely to spark new ideas. Share these
prototypes with your focus group to select the most promising solution for each
of the problems to be solved. |
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④
Test
Test the complete product using the most promising solutions identified during
the prototyping phase. In an iterative process, the results generated during the
testing phase are often used to redefine one or more problems and update
consumer insights.
The
feedback obtained during the testing phase will help you to derive deeper
understanding of the product and its users, to reveal new insights, to create
new ideas for the project, and to make alterations and refinements in the
solutions to improve it. |
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Integrated Art and
Science
When merged together, iterative design thinking and scientific methods help us
to explain and predict
trends, to develop a better understanding of the world and act within it
more effectively...
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