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Annie Jean-Baptiste

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Beschreibung

Diversity and Inclusion to build better products from the front lines at Google

Establishing diverse and inclusive organizations is an economic imperative for every industry. Any business that isn’t reaching a diverse market is missing out on enormous revenue potential and the opportunity to build products that suit their users' core needs. The economic “why” has been firmly established, but what about the “how?” How can business leaders adapt to our ever-more-diverse world by capturing market share AND building more inclusive products for people of color, women and other underrepresented groups? The Product Inclusion Team at Google has developed strategies to do just that and Building For Everyone is the practical guide to following in their footsteps.

This book makes publicly available for the first time the same inclusive design process used at Google to create user-centric award-winning and profitable products. Author and Head of Product Inclusion Annie Jean-Baptiste outlines what those practices look like in industries beyond tech with fascinating case studies. Readers will learn the key strategies and step-by-step processes for inclusive product design that limits risk and increases profitability.

  • Discover the questions you should be asking about diversity and inclusion in your products for marketers, user researchers, product managers and more.
  • Understand the research the Product Inclusion team drove to back up their practices
  • Learn the “ABCs of Product Inclusion” to build inclusion into your organization’s culture
  • Leverage the product inclusion suite of tools to get your organization building more inclusively and identifying new opportunities.
  • Read case studies to see how product inclusion works across industries and learn what doesn't work.

Building For Everyone will show you how to infuse your business processes with inclusive design. You’ll learn best practices for inclusion in product design, marketing, management, leadership and beyond, straight from the innovative Google Product Inclusion team.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2020

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Table of Contents

COVER

FOREWORD

INTRODUCTION

Planning for Success

Making Inclusive Design a Priority

Bringing an Inclusive Lens to Google Assistant

Building for Everyone, with Everyone

Notes

CHAPTER 1: Building for Everyone: Why Product Inclusion Matters

Product Inclusion Team Approach

Understanding Who Your User Is

Understanding What Exclusion Looks Like

Speaking a Common Language

Expanding Diversity and Inclusion to Products and Services

Recognizing the Need to Communicate with Underrepresented Users

Case Studies: Prioritizing Inclusion Across Industries

How Google's Product Inclusion Team Got Its Start

Notes

CHAPTER 2: Google's Capstone Research: What We Learned

Understanding Our Research

Learning from Our Experience

Putting Our Research and Experience to Work in Your Organization

CHAPTER 3: 20 Essential Product Inclusion Questions to Light the Way

The 10 Questions Every Team Needs to Ask and Answer

10 Questions Most Teams Ask Our Product Inclusion Team

What's the one thing I should focus on?

Note

CHAPTER 4: Building the Case for Product Inclusion and Getting Buy‐In

Building the Case for Product Inclusion

Building Buy‐In: Top‐Down and Bottom‐Up

Notes

CHAPTER 5: Adopting Product Inclusion Principles to Guide Your Work

Checking Out Existing Product Inclusion Principles

Pinpointing Your Own Product Inclusion Principles

Putting Principles into Practice

Note

CHAPTER 6: Integrating Product Inclusion with Your Work

Holding Teams Accountable with Objectives and Key Results ( OKRs )

Integrating Product Inclusion at Key Touchpoints

Staying on Track with the Product Inclusion Checklist

CHAPTER 7: Getting to Know Your Underrepresented Users

Building an Inclusive Research Team

Modifying Research Studies for Underrepresented Users

A Six‐Step Inclusive Research Framework

Bringing It All Together: From Research to Product

Note

CHAPTER 8: Integrating Product Inclusion into the Ideation Process

Conducting Inclusive Design Sprints

Delivering Lightning Talks

CHAPTER 9: Starting Your Own Dogfooding and Adversarial Testing Programs

Creating and Managing a Dogfooders/Testers Pool

Case Studies on Inclusive Dogfooding/Adversarial Testing

Notes

CHAPTER 10: Making Your Marketing More Inclusive

Inclusive Marketing Guidelines

Google's Inclusive Marketing Consultants Task Force

CHAPTER 11: Measuring Product Inclusion Performance

Mastering Performance Measurement Fundamentals

Choosing the Right Performance Metrics

Combining Metrics with Objectives and Timelines

Note

CHAPTER 12: The Many Shades of Nude: Product Inclusion in Fashion and Retail

Focusing on Inclusive Fashion

Making Your Retail Store More Inclusive and Accessible

Product Inclusion at the Gap

Product Inclusion at Dyne Life

Notes

CHAPTER 13: Looking to the Future of Product Inclusion

Sharing Perspectives on the Future of Product Inclusion

Product Inclusion Across Industries

So What Does All This Mean?

Notes

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

INDEX

END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT

List of Tables

Chapter 11

Table 11.1 Tie metrics to objectives and timelines.

List of Illustrations

Introduction

Figure I.1 Opportunity and purchasing power for underrepresented demographic...

Chapter 4

Figure 4.1 A sample “Testing on the Toilet” flyer

Figure 4.2 A sample “Learning on the Loo” flyer

Chapter 12

Figure 12.1 DYNE-GOOGLE digital campaign video.

Chapter 13

Figure 13.1 Keagan enjoys a doll from A Doll Like Me.

Guide

Cover

Table of Contents

Begin Reading

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BUILDING FOR EVERYONE

EXPAND YOUR MARKET WITH DESIGN PRACTICES FROM GOOGLE’S PRODUCT INCLUSION TEAM

 

 

ANNIE JEAN-BAPTISTE

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2020 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.

Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.Published simultaneously in Canada.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate per‐copy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, (978) 750‐8400, fax (978) 646‐8600, or on the Web at www.copyright.com. Requests to the Publisher for permission should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 111 River Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748‐6011, fax (201) 748‐6008, or online at http://www.wiley.com/go/permissions.

Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. No warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or written sales materials. The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable for your situation. You should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither the publisher nor author shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial damages, including but not limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.

For general information on our other products and services or for technical support, please contact our Customer Care Department within the United States at (800) 762‐2974, outside the United States at (317) 572‐3993 or fax (317) 572‐4002.

Wiley publishes in a variety of print and electronic formats and by print‐on‐demand. Some material included with standard print versions of this book may not be included in e‐books or in print‐on‐demand. If this book refers to media such as a CD or DVD that is not included in the version you purchased, you may download this material at http://booksupport.wiley.com. For more information about Wiley products, visit www.wiley.com.

Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data:

Names: Jean‐Baptiste, Annie, author. | John Wiley & Sons, publisher.

Title: Building for everyone : expand your market with design practices from Google's product inclusion team / Annie Jean‐Baptiste.

Description: Hoboken, New Jersey : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2020. | Includes index.

Identifiers: LCCN 2020021970 (print) | LCCN 2020021971 (ebook) | ISBN 9781119646228 (hardback) | ISBN 9781119646242 (adobe pdf) | ISBN 9781119646235 (epub)

Subjects: LCSH: Product design. | Universal design. | Design–Social practices.

Classification: LCC TS171 .J43 2020 (print) | LCC TS171 (ebook) | DDC 658.5/752–dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020021970

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020021971

COVER DESIGN: PAUL MCCARTHYAUTHOR PHOTO: © SHAMAYIM SHACARO

To God, thank you for a multitude of blessings, including the opportunity to share these learnings and to continue learning throughout my life.

To all the beautifully underrepresented people of this world who live their truth in whatever manner they so choose, I see you.

To mum, daddy, and Herc, thanks for always being the strongest support system and for showing me that family will always have your back no matter what. Thank you for sacrificing, thank you for pushing, thank you for showing us that the American dream is possible but more importantly that the Haitian essence is undeniable. I will work every day of my life to make you proud and make sure that your sacrifices are worth it.

To Allan, my absolute best friend—thanks for believing in me and pushing me, always.

To my grandparents and ancestors, both here and in the stars, that have shown that Haitian and African spirit is resilient, bold, beautiful, and brave.

To Todd, my angel, my biggest champion. Thanks for always making me feel seen no matter what.

Thank you. I am eternally grateful.

FOREWORD

The purpose of any organization is to build great products (or services) that solve people's problems or enhance their lives in some way. That mission is accomplished best when the focus is on the customer, whose needs, desires, and potential inspire innovation. Unfortunately, in the world of product design, we often get so wrapped up in design and product that we forget about the people who buy, consume, wear, drive, and use our products in other ways. This oversight is especially problematic, and common, when we are building for people who are different from us in terms of race, ethnicity, age, gender, abilities, language, location, and more.

In Building for Everyone, Google's Head of Product Inclusion, Annie Jean‐Baptiste, brings the focus back to customers while widening the lens through which we view them. The resulting perspective, which is more inclusive of the vast diversity of the human population, enables and drives us to build products to meet the demands of a much broader consumer base. By taking a more inclusive approach to product design, development, and marketing, organizations stand to reap the benefits of increased innovation, customer loyalty, and growth. Along the way, organizations discover how to do well by doing good.

Understanding the phrase “product inclusion” needs to start from understanding Silicon Valley's use of the word “product.” How that word gets used in Silicon Valley will often differ from the rest of the world, but it's becoming increasingly more salient in today's world. These days “product” is becoming more common as more people start to make products and services across industries. Getting comfortable with what Valley folks refer to as “product” will help you get into the right mood for reading this book, though the best practices span across industries.

A digital product is an app on your mobile device, or a website you click through, or a conversational bot you talk with. Techies who make these digital experiences refer to them as “products” in the same way that a baker will refer to their product as bread or a furniture maker will refer to their product as a chair. When you can see, smell, or feel bread with your senses and you can touch, kick, or trial a chair with your body, as products go they are real and relatable.

Digital products can feel like a far distance from a loaf of bread or a chair, but from a technologist's perspective they're indistinguishable. It's an unnatural leap to make because there's no product to point at when interacting with a mobile app or a website or amidst a conversation with a voice assistant. But when you make the switch happen in your mind, something amazing happens: you shift to a business view of the world where completely digital products occupy a bizarre world where marginal costs, inventory costs, and distribution costs go nearly to zero for a product. That's why both digital and physical products need to prioritize this type of work.

Now that you've started to take the ambitious leap to grasping the implications of wholly digital products, you can then move into the similarly disorienting depths of the word “inclusion.” This shift requires you to decidedly jump in the diametrically opposite direction over to the non‐techie, humanist perspective. Inclusive design expert Kat Holmes provides one of the best definitions of inclusion as simply: the opposite of exclusion. Have you ever experienced being excluded from something? Like a birthday party? Or a promotion? How did it feel? Hint: BAD.

Back to the phrase “product inclusion” and putting the two words together, we can read in this two‐word phrase the juxtaposition of a new industry being defined by Silicon Valley that seeks to do the opposite of excluding others. That's because there's a history of tech products that have been unconsciously excluding others that you may not have known about. But more importantly, you're also going to learn how inclusion is now being introduced and prioritized into the digital bloodstream of not only tech products, but across industries like medicine, fashion, and more.

There was a time when the tech industry rallied around the mantra of “move fast and break things”—in other words, there was no need for accountability when the users numbered a few thousand people. But today we've interconnected millions and now billions of people. So to flippantly break things is no longer an acceptable outcome. The next generation of product creators, regardless of industry, subscribes to the newer belief of “move fast and *fix* things.”

This book is filled with countless recipes to fix many of the experiences that we've now deployed at scale. Product inclusion will be the central challenge for any industry that creates a product or service to rally around—and this comprehensive guide provides the first atlas for navigating its many previously uncharted spaces. I know that in the many digital experiences I am charged with guiding today across industry types, there's going to be a pearl of wisdom from this collection that lets me put product inclusion first.

If you are in an industry other than tech, you may wonder what you can learn about product inclusion from somebody at Google who is so far distant from what you do. After all, a product in Silicon Valley is an app, a website, a search engine, a conversational bot—digital products that occupy a bizarre world in which marginal costs, inventory costs, and distribution costs drop to near zero. Just as Annie encourages you to widen your lens, she has widened hers for this book by presenting insights from a wide variety of business leaders in medicine, fashion, entertainment, fitness, and more.

I encourage you to not only read this book, but put it into practice. This book will serve as your guide to harnessing the power of diverse perspectives to drive innovation, growth, revenue, and more.

John MaedaEVP/Chief Experience Officer, Publicis Sapient

INTRODUCTION

Being human is looking so deep within you that I see myself.

—Inspired by Mark Nepo, Poet and Spiritual Adviser

Think about a time when you felt completely yourself. Maybe you were with family members or friends that completely accepted you, or you were performing a hobby that you enjoyed immensely and could lose yourself in. You felt at ease, almost blissful, void of judgment because you could shake any preconceived notions of who you are, who you are supposed to be…and just be.

Now, think about a time when you felt excluded or ignored. Have you ever shown up at a party, summer camp, or a new job only to discover that everyone had already made friends and wasn't particularly welcoming or eager to get to know you? How did that make you feel? At the end of the day, everyone wants to feel welcome. It's what people want in their relationships with their family members, their friends, their pets, and their colleagues.

When we don't fit in or when products or services do not feel as though they were built for us, we feel excluded, frustrated, disappointed, or even upset. When a product or service seems to be designed for everyone but us, we can feel as though we were ignored or disregarded by those involved in the product design process. Our feelings can range from mere annoyance (“Whatever, I didn't want to use this thing anyway”) to deep alienation or hurt (“I feel like this does not represent me or my community and what this represents is threatening”).

Knowing that we've all had an experience of being othered (marginalized by a social group that considers itself superior) regardless of our background, it's imperative that we don't create that feeling in people who interact with our products, services, content, marketing, or customer service. When creating products, we want to avoid building anything, even unintentionally, that makes anyone feel this way. One of the goals of this book is to help you and others in your organization avoid engendering this feeling in the users of your products or services.

As designers, creators, engineers, user researchers, marketers, and innovators, we want everyone to feel included. Isn't that why we got into this work—to be able to create products, services, and content that shape the world for the better, that empower people to live richer lives, to experience things they haven't with the people (or creatures) they love? At the heart of this commitment is inclusion: everyone seeing themselves in the end result of a company's or an individual's work. People want to feel seen, heard, and considered; they want to feel that people like them matter to companies, that their unique backgrounds and perspectives are valued.

It's not enough to want to be inclusive. We must think and act with intent and deliberation. We must center inclusion at key points in the design, development, testing, and marketing processes to ensure that differences among users are considered and addressed. As diversity and inclusion champion Joe Gerstandt1 reminds us, “If you do not intentionally, deliberately and proactively include, you will unintentionally exclude.” This phrase is often repeated at Google to remind our teams that merely wanting to do the right thing isn't enough.

Planning for Success

The adage “Failing to plan is planning to fail” definitely applies when you're designing for inclusion. Because thinking about diversity, equity, and inclusion in product design may be new to you or your team, having a solid plan that everyone understands and buys into is important.

As with any other endeavor, well‐defined roles, deadlines, objectives, and metrics are key components to successful implementation or execution. We touch on each of these topics in this book as we put theory into practice and provide guidance on how to bring inclusion into the various phases of product design, including ideation, user experience and design (UX), user testing, and marketing.

As we plan for inclusion, following the golden rule—treating others as we would like to be treated—isn't the way to go. We need to adopt the platinum rule—treating others as they would like to be treated. Brian Stevenson, Executive Director at the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) and author of Just Mercy, encourages us to get “proximate.” Getting proximate is the act of getting closer to someone, to understand their experiences, their fears, their hopes. The goal is to build empathy, which hopefully leads to action.

Although Stevenson discusses the need for empathy in a different context, this concept is very applicable to product inclusion as well. As a whole, businesses and other organizations haven't been proximate with all consumers, including people of color, lower socioeconomic status, and advanced age; people who live in rural communities or outside the business's home country; people with disabilities; and those who are members of the LGBTQ+ community. When dimensions of diversity intersect (for example, a Black woman over 50), the challenge to serve consumers' needs and preferences becomes even more nuanced. Becoming proximate enables you to understand, to build empathy, to want to be better, and to want to do better. It provides the drive to hold yourself, your teammates, and your organization's leadership accountable to truly building for users regardless of their background.

However, wanting and doing are light years apart, and that is where planning enters the picture. Planning is the bridge that connects the two. Planning enables organizations to break deeply ingrained thinking and behaviors. Planning holds the hope and promise of changing the culture.

You may be thinking, “OK. I get it. I can't only want to build inclusively. I have to plan to build inclusively. And then I need to do it. So tell me how!” We will get there. But I want to be sure that I ground this book in how integral inclusion is to building and marketing products that truly resonate with your customers and users, because this work can get messy, complicated, frustrating, and awkward. For example, when you're ready to launch, you may discover that your product's colors are not discernable to someone who is color‐blind. Or, as your marketing team is putting the final touches on its latest campaign, someone points out that all the people of color depicted in the ads have lighter skin. Or, you are getting ready to launch in Latin America only to find out that your translations from English failed to account for the cultural nuances of different Latin American countries. Setbacks such as these can derail the best of intentions; having a plan keeps everyone on track and the earlier on in the process you bring product inclusion in, the more likely you can avoid these challenges and find even more opportunity.

Making Inclusive Design a Priority

I understand that all organizations have priorities and product inclusion, resource constraints, and time constraints. I get it—you're probably strapped for time and cannot imagine adding yet another initiative to your workflow. Perhaps you have heard about product inclusion already and bought into it as the right thing and the best thing to do, and you may think you already have a pretty good idea of who your user is.

I understand because I've been there—I've worked with hundreds of teams and businesses, from small and medium to large organizations inside and outside of Google, helping them with their holistic advertising strategies on Google's platforms. I've sat with them and heard their concerns and helped them grow their businesses and think up new ones. I've consulted businesses on resources and understand that organizations must be ruthless in prioritizing in order to succeed.

As I was writing this book, I took into consideration that organizations have other priorities and often limited resources. I accommodated those challenges by breaking down product inclusion into four main phases—ideation, user experience (UX), user testing, and marketing—and providing the option to start slowly with only one or two. Early in this book, I offer advice on how to get started even if you have a small team by engaging with more diverse users; for example, you may want to talk to real users and leverage their stories in your marketing. Later in the book, I introduce tactics and techniques that cross all four phases.

However you decide to start, realize (as I and my team have realized) that product inclusion is an exciting, fun, and never‐ending journey of discovery. My team hasn't always gotten it right. We are learning together and hope to learn with others who are doing great work in this space. We also are learning from others who have committed to product inclusion practices in the hope that, together, we can create an ecosystem and share best practices across industries to create more inclusive products.

We are excited about the journey ahead and we know that in order to serve billions of users across many dimensions, including race, ethnicity, ability, sexual orientation, gender, socioeconomic status, age (and more!), and across the intersections of these demographics, we need to prioritize and maintain focus on inclusion.

Across Google, when people talk about diversity, equity, and inclusion, we often liken it to going to the gym and building a muscle. At first, you may dread the challenge and the effort required, but as you build your product inclusion muscle, it gets easier, and the easier it gets, the more fun and exciting it becomes. You'll be able to do more, you'll feel yourself growing more confident, and you'll look back on your journey and be proud of what you and diverse others have accomplished working together. Don't think that just because you may not get it all the first time (or the first couple times) that you have failed; every failure is a learning experience often accompanied by new, unforeseen opportunity. Thinking and talking about inclusion are fantastic first steps. After all, ideas and conversations are the seeds of innovation, and when those seeds come to fruition, your users will thank you, and your organization will prosper!

Yes, your organization will prosper. Many people mistakenly assume that underrepresented users comprise an insignificant portion of the population, so making them a priority is a low priority business decision. That assumption and the conclusion on which it is based are incorrect. If you subscribe to this mistaken belief, I urge you to shift your thinking to think less about who your users are and more about who they could be. Draw your circle a little bigger to encompass those standing outside it. As you do, you will begin to notice people who may not look, act, or think like you, but like you, they are yearning to feel seen through the products and services you offer. They may represent another gender, race, or socioeconomic status or a combination of these dimensions. Their voices may not be those traditionally heard and listened to in the product design process, but theirs are the voices that will define the future or your products, making them richer and better overall.

As you expand your circle, you bring consumers who are unserved and underserved into your compass. You uplift their needs and make them core to your practices and your processes. They become both passive and active participants in your design process. As you prioritize inclusive design, you begin to center on deeply held user concerns with the aim to resolve those concerns, which is fantastic for business and essential for companies to remain relevant now and in the future.

Figure I.1 Opportunity and purchasing power for underrepresented demographics.

If investing in product inclusion seems risky, consider the risk of ignoring the potential just in terms of revenue and profits. A ton of opportunity is on the table, as shown in Figure I.1.

This is groundbreaking. By building with the diversity of the world in mind and centering inclusion in your product design and marketing processes, you have the opportunity to tap into the trillions of dollars of global spend being left on the table by less enlightened organizations.

If you need additional proof or you believe that “the proof is in the pudding,” take a look at how we are integrating product inclusion at Google—the subject of the following section.

Bringing an Inclusive Lens to Google Assistant

At Google, our inclusion team plays an integral role in the product design and development process. As partners in the process, we want to ensure that all Google Assistant–enabled products deliver an inclusive experience, and our partners, Beth Tsai and Bobby Weber, share our commitment. They were proactive and intentional about bringing inclusion into the process before launch, as opposed to identifying and resolving issues later in the process, which is far more difficult and costly. They wanted to delight customers and felt that applying an inclusive lens to the process was a key factor in doing so. The team wanted to ensure that at launch, Assistant did not offend or alienate users based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, or other dimensions that make our users who they are.

We realized that in order to make Assistant inclusive, we had to bring in a multitude of diverse perspectives. We worked with the team to “stress test” (adversarially test) Assistant. We brought Googlers from different backgrounds and perspectives together in war rooms to try and break the assistant using the cultural background they brought to the table. We knew that Googlers from one of our affinity groups (a group of individuals linked by common interest, purpose, or diversity dimension) would have more expertise than Google Assistant or a small team of developers would have in respect to what certain communities would find alienating or offensive. We also knew that communities are not a monolith, and so asking one person would not be representative of a whole community.

Our product inclusion champions tested Assistant based on the assumption that some users were likely to issue racist, sexist, homophobic, and otherwise offensive questions and commands. For example, as a result of our efforts, if you ask Google Assistant “Do Black lives matter?” it says, “Of course, Black lives matter.”

By integrating inclusion in product design and development, we significantly reduced the number of escalations requiring action at launch. (An escalation is an act of exploiting a bug or design flaw in a product.) Escalations can hurt your brand, erode user trust, and slow sales. All of this is detrimental to a business.

At launch, Assistant had .0004 percent of total interactions that needed to be acted upon. In other words, out of billions of queries at launch, only .0004 percent of queries were so egregious that they needed to be acted upon. This was a huge success and very important given Assistant's growth and reach. In addition:

“Available in more than 90 countries and in over 30 languages, Google Assistant now helps more than 500 million people every month to get things done across smart speakers and Smart Displays, phones, TVs, cars and more.”

2

“Google Assistant is already available on more than 1 billion devices.”

3

“Active users of Google Assistant grew four times over the past year.”

4

Even with Assistant's growing popularity, we have seen minimal escalations, partially due to the fact that we prioritized product inclusion and integrated it in the design, development, and testing processes.

Of course, surveying every single person from every single community before launching a product is impossible, but bringing diverse perspectives to the table is imperative. You are probably already conducting focus groups and performing other types of user research; making these processes more inclusive is simply a matter of increasing the diversity of the researchers and participants.

Building for Everyone, with Everyone

At its core, this book is about people with a diversity of backgrounds working together to build and market products and services for everyone regardless of race, color, belief system, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, ability, or other qualities that make us different. Our credo (coined by my former teammate Errol King) is to “build for everyone, with everyone.” That commitment is what our team and what many teams at Google are working to instill intentionally and thoughtfully into the people and processes that create our products and services. Our goal is to ensure that no matter who you are or where you live, you can find benefit and delight in our products and services.

This book doesn't sugarcoat the complexity of addressing the needs and preferences of our incredibly diverse human population, and it doesn't underestimate the time and effort required to become proximate with the multidimensional and multifaceted nature of individuals. What this book does is help you appreciate the value and necessity of placing human beings at the core of your design principles and practice, and it shows you how to do just that.

We are living in a very exciting time, a time when the historically underrepresented and disenfranchised are empowered and empowering themselves to wholly participate and lead in all aspects of life, including the global economy. These groups, like all people, deserve to be seen, heard, and served by the products and services we offer. We need to build for everyone, with everyone, not only because it is the right thing to do, but also because it drives innovation and growth while making the world a better, richer place.

Product inclusion basically boils down to listening, caring, and being humble. We're all on a journey toward happiness and self‐fulfillment, traveling along a path strewn with challenges and opportunities. We can help one another along this path and tap into the opportunities by doing so. Just put yourself in the shoes of consumers (be intentional about bringing underrepresented voices to the fold), ask questions, consider the problems they face, the opportunities that stand before them, and how they may be currently excluded from the solutions and benefits available to others, and keep trying. The opportunity to build better, more inclusive products and grow your business in the process awaits!

This book will cover learnings that I've been fortunate enough to help shape, and I'm continually inspired by the community that continues to make product inclusion even more of a priority, both inside and outside of Google.

When we succeed in building and delivering inclusive products and services, we will begin to fully reflect the beauty and diversity of our world and to prosper in all ways. We will continue to identify and create new markets and build wealth, and as we lift the entire population through our efforts, we, too, will reap the benefits and experience the fulfillment of having made a positive impact in the lives of others.

Notes

1

   

www.joegerstandt.com

.

2

   

https://blog.google/products/assistant/ces-2020-google-assistant/

(January 7, 2020).

3

   Ibid.

4

   

https://bgr.com/2019/01/07/google-assistant-1-billion-devices-android-phones/

(January 7, 2019).

CHAPTER 1Building for Everyone: Why Product Inclusion Matters

Across industries, we've heard that inclusion is “the right thing to do.” Good people and ethical organizations believe in and practice diversity, equity, and inclusion. This is certainly true, but it oversimplifies the reason why people and organizations should care about and embrace these virtues.

Diversity, equity, and inclusion matter for two reasons. The first is a human reason—people matter. Diversity enriches the world with different languages, perspectives, customs, foods, clothing, art, innovation, and much more. Equity and inclusion are essential for making people feel welcome, appreciated, and empowered; in a way, they enable everyone to flourish and to contribute in all ways that make them unique.

The second is a business reason—diversity, equity, and inclusion are good for business and for all productive human endeavors. Organizations that engage with people representing a wide range of demographics reap ideas and innovations that vastly improve their products and services and even open their eyes to new markets and entirely new businesses. As a result, they grow their customer base, increase innovation, and build momentum over less inclusive players.

To create for the world we live in, we must build in an environment that reflects that world. We cannot build for people without understanding them, their needs, their preferences, and what disappoints and upsets them and makes them feel excluded. The world is changing, and this change is accelerating. You can witness it happening around you—in the news and entertainment programming you tune in to, the advertisements you see, and hopefully in your neighborhood and workplace.

I encourage you to embrace this change, and I challenge you to take the lead in promoting this positive transformation by creating products and services that represent the makeup of this ever‐evolving world. The first step is to develop an understanding of your users (customers or clients)—who they are, where they come from, what's important to them, and how their core needs align with your organization's and your work's mission. Having this understanding is the key to unlocking value, thereby opening the doors to growth and innovation.

Absence of inclusion is a threat to business

—Daisy Auger‐Dominguez, Founder, Auger‐Dominguez Ventures, a workplace culture consultancy and advisory firmDaisyAuger-Dominguez.com

The notion of building inclusively is one that the tech industry has lifted up, but that any company—from one producing consumer products to one creating content—must take seriously. Why? Because of an increasingly diverse customer and client base who embrace and value authenticity in their products, services, and content diversity. Add to that growing shareholder, employee, and customer activism, and leaders and companies are at risk of surviving if they fail to build a diverse workplace and adopt inclusive business practices.

For the most part, companies tend to be reactive in this area, taking action only in response to loss of market share and diminishing brand loyalty and financial returns. But with increasing competition across every industry, companies can no longer risk waiting to create products that more closely resemble, serve, and connect with their customers, clients, and viewers.

From the lens of service‐based organizations, we can expect an increasing number of prospective clients to ask the question, “If you can't run your business inclusively with a lens on the landscape of today and the future of work, why am I trusting you to advise me on what to do?” That's a fair question and one I believe will surface time and again.

If voluntary change does not happen soon enough, it will happen by uncomfortable client‐led, employee‐led, and investor‐led forces. Bottom line: Companies that fail to build safe, inclusive, and diverse workplaces and adopt inclusive business practices risk their bottom line, brand, and reputation.

Product Inclusion Team Approach

On our diversity and inclusion site, we say “Google's mission is to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful. When we say we want to build for everyone, we mean everyone. To do that well, we need a workforce that's more representative of the users we serve.”

When we build products at Google, we think in terms of building for everyone, with everyone. This is hard work. We all have biases and can't understand every culture, preference, and individual need. We've all made mistakes and will likely continue to do so, but when we commit to striving to do better, to bringing in different perspectives, to calling out bias, and to owning our mistakes, we can begin to design and build more inclusive products. It's a journey, and we're committed to learning and improving.

While our work focuses squarely on the human factor and is representative of work being done not only inside Google but within many other companies, tech and non‐tech, it is decidedly unique in that it is deeply rooted in product and marketing. It also is grounded in business metrics and data around improving the bottom line across multiple dimensions of diversity and the intersections of those dimensions. (We'll dive into the capstone research our team did to prove the business case for inclusion in Chapter 2.)

At Google, we also work hard to get everyone, at every level of the organization, involved in the process, and I recommend that you do the same. Whether you are a business leader, product manager, program manager, marketer, or designer, or you work in an industry that isn't tech, you can contribute significantly to the success of your product or service by leveraging insight from your own background and experience and by viewing your work through a lens of inclusivity.

Thinking inclusively: An engineer's perspective

—Peter Sherman, Google Engineer

Inclusive thinking can begin with an exercise that should be simple for most engineers—consider that you (the engineer) are often the technical support specialist for your non‐technical friends and family. As a technically minded individual, you view many of their questions/issues as simple, and you solve them easily. In that moment, it can be helpful to understand what the experience is like on the other side—to use a product or service that is seemingly not built for you. Consider that for any consumer product, “built by engineers for engineers” is probably not a good product development strategy—at best, it will limit the audience; at worst, it will alienate users and make them feel unvalued. Non‐engineers may not understand the design and the process flow, or may be confused by the instructions and may abandon the product altogether.

By considering the entire potential audience for a product, engineers can design features to work well for all of their users. We commonly apply these principles with general user experience (UX) and user interface design and with accessibility and internationalization/localization. But to truly design for everybody, we must think even more broadly. Ask if there are inherent biases in a product, service, or system. For example, a camera might have bias in the color rendering of skin tones; an app may be built with connectivity requirements that can be satisfied only in certain communities; a form may require inputs in a specific character set; a service may assume a certain level of digital literacy and access that is exclusive to certain users; the list goes on.

Whenever I approach a new system, I try to consider how a user will interact with a feature or product, what inputs are relevant, how the system works with the data and how it perceives the world, and ultimately what underlying technologies, assumptions, and tuning/learning will contribute to the final output. With this in mind, discussions with other teammates, managers, and users—especially those who are not like me and can bring a different perspective to the table—can uncover potential things we've missed with respect to possible built‐in bias and how we can address those issues to make the products as inclusive as they can be.

Above all, I believe that the engine for creating truly inclusive products is the collaborative engagement with people who have diverse backgrounds and perspectives—when we work together, we form the lever that can move the world.

Understanding Who Your User Is

All organizations attempt to understand the users of their products and services. They need that understanding to evaluate marketability, but they also employ their user analysis in the design and development of products and services. This practice is nothing new. What is new is the increasing necessity to consider differences among individuals in order to serve a broader consumer base.

When done right, inclusivity is baked into the product. In tech, for example, people of color are underrepresented. To build inclusivity into a new tech product, we need to bring people of color into key points in the design, development, testing, and marketing processes to reduce bias. Consider another example. Suppose a team wants to build a camera that can be used for home monitoring and security. Many teams begin by defining their user along with their core challenge. They decide who is most likely to use this product and identify what core need this particular user has. Suppose the team decides they are building this app for moms who want to be able to watch over their homes when they are at work or school, running errands, or away from home for other reasons. The team created a very specific target user, which isn't necessarily bad, but it does limit the market and potentially leaves a lot of money on the table. The team would be wise to broaden its scope to include stay‐at‐home dads/parents, grandparents, caregivers, and business owners, and the diversity these different users represent could significantly impact design decisions related to features, functionality, and more.

Unfortunately, companies often build products for a small subset of people familiar to and often similar to the people creating the product; this is called the “like me” bias. What happens is that a majority group frames the persona of the target user and the core business challenge; as a result, they fail to include people who have been historically underserved by the industry overall, whatever that industry happens to be—tech, finance, fashion, entertainment, and the list goes on. An example of this might be picking a name for a product and not realizing that it means something completely different, or even offensive in another language.

The further along in the process you are before you bring in these users and understand their needs, the harder and more expensive it is to build an inclusive product. Even if you succeed to some degree, products that are built for inclusion as an afterthought often carry an air of inauthenticity. Historically underrepresented users can often sense when they were not thought of early in and throughout the design process.