Design Thinking Process: by Dr. Rajasshrie Pillai & Prof. Rajashree K. Gethe
Design Thinking Process: by Dr. Rajasshrie Pillai & Prof. Rajashree K. Gethe
Design Thinking Process: by Dr. Rajasshrie Pillai & Prof. Rajashree K. Gethe
By
Dr. Rajasshrie Pillai & Prof. Rajashree K. Gethe
Design thinking – “Transform how you
think”
From To
MAKING MAKING
PEOPLE THINGS
WANTS PEOPLE
THINGS WANT
e.g. Online Mktg, e.g. Designing Digital
Digital Advertising Products and services
What is Design Thinking?
“Design is not just what it looks like and feel like. Design Is what it works”
- Steve Jobs
• Ask why.
• Never say “usually” when asking a question.
• Encourage stories • Look for inconsistencies.
• Pay attention to nonverbal cues.
• Don’t be afraid of silence.
• Ask questions neutrally and don’t suggest answers.
Empathize - Build empathy with analogies
• Use analogies to gain a fresh way of looking at an environment
• analogies allow us to express our ideas or to explain complex matters in an
understandable and motivating way.
• Start by identifying the aspects of a situation that are most important,
interesting, or problematic.
• Find other experiences that contain some of these aspects — it will help you
gain a better understanding of your users’ problems, and it will also spark
new ideas to improve their experiences.
• Create an inspiration space for analogies. You can do so by pinning photos
and anecdotes of the analogous experiences you have found.
Empathize - Use photo and video user-based
studies
• Use video recordings of users performing their regular activities
• Try to make the study as casual as possible so that the user doesn’t feel
any pressure
• Use different techniques like how-what-why to examine the videos or
photos or frames taken from the videos
Empathize - Engage with extreme users
• Determine who’s extreme. https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=5R3pKV9ucBc&t=607s
• Engage.
• Observe and interview extreme users just like other folks. Look for
workarounds (or other extreme behaviors) to spark inspiration and
uncover insights.
• Look at the extreme in all of us.
• Look to extreme users to spur wild ideas. Then narrow in on what
resonates with the primary users that you’re designing for.
Empathize - Bodystorm