Design Thinking for Strategic Innovation - Idris Mootee - E-Book

Design Thinking for Strategic Innovation E-Book

Idris Mootee

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Beschreibung

A comprehensive playbook for applied design thinking in business and management, complete with concepts and toolkits As many companies have lost confidence in the traditional ways of running a business, design thinking has entered the mix. Design Thinking for Strategic Innovation presents a framework for design thinking that is relevant to business management, marketing, and design strategies and also provides a toolkit to apply concepts for immediate use in everyday work. It explains how design thinking can bring about creative solutions to solve complex business problems. Organized into five sections, this book provides an introduction to the values and applications of design thinking, explains design thinking approaches for eight key challenges that most businesses face, and offers an application framework for these business challenges through exercises, activities, and resources. * An essential guide for any business seeking to use design thinking as a problem-solving tool as well as a business method to transform companies and cultures * The framework is based on work developed by the author for an executive program in Design Thinking taught in Harvard Graduate School of Design * Author Idris Mootee is a management guru and a leading expert on applied design thinking Revolutionize your approach to solving your business's greatest challenges through the power of Design Thinking for Strategic Innovation.

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Seitenzahl: 144

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2013

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Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword

Scene 01: There’s No More Business As Usual

The Butterfly Effect and Long-Range Planning

Applied Design Thinking Is Strategic Innovation

Time to Think beyond Crisis Mode

Changing Management Paradigms

Scene 02: What Is Design Thinking, Really?

Is Design Thinking a Science or an Art?

Design Thinking Has Been Oversimplified

Scene 03: Applied Design Thinking in Business and Strategy

Design Thinking to the Rescue

We’ve Lost Touch with What’s Around Us

Every Future Business Leader Needs to Be a Good Design Thinker

The 10 Design Thinking Principles That Redefine Business Management

Scene 04: Introducing the Design Thinking MBA

Linking Design Thinking Solutions to Business Challenges

Business Challenge 01: Growth

Design Thinking Approach 01: Storytelling

Business Challenge 02: Predictability

Design Thinking Approach 02: Strategic Foresight

Business Challenge 03: Change

Design Thinking Approach 03: Sense Making

Business Challenge 04: Maintaining Relevance

Design Thinking Approach 04: Value Redefinition

Business Challenge 05: Extreme Competition

Design Thinking Approach 05: Experience Design

Business Challenge 06: Standardization

Design Thinking Approach 06: Humanization

Business Challenge 07: Creative Culture

Design Thinking Approach 07: Rapid Prototyping

Business Challenge 08: Strategy and Organization

Design Thinking Approach 08: Business Model Design

Applied Design Thinking for Business Model Design

Scene 05: Hiring Design Thinkers Is Not Enough; We Need to Create Design Thinking Companies

About the Author

Photo Credits

Index

Cover image: Sarah ChungCover & Book design: Sarah Chung, Idea Couture

Copyright © 2013 by Idris Mootee. 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, 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 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 the 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 the author shall be liable for damages arising herefrom.

For general information about our other products and services, 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.

ISBN 978-1-118-62012-0 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-74885-5 (ebk);ISBN 978-1-118-74868-8 (ebk)

To A. Mootee

 

Thank you, Dad, for believing in me before I did.

And you were always right.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book would not have been possible without the generous help and support from a great many people. Four in particular stand out: Dr. Moran Gerard, who came to the rescue on the week before I needed to submit my final manuscript and has been a valuable colleague, friend, and editor; Sarah Chung, who has been working with me to shape the design of this book and is responsible for giving it a personality and making it awesome; Erik Roth, who took the time from his crazy schedule to write the introduction for this book; and Brian Kenet, who invited me to design and teach the Design Thinking Executive Program at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, which this book was based upon.

I owe a huge debt of gratitude to all my friends and clients around the world who provided me the opportunities to introduce these ideas to their organizations. Scott Danielson for his friendship, enlightening dialogues, and creative spirit that he radiates. And everyone at Idea Couture, including Cheesan Chew, Scott Friedmann, and Patrick Glinski who are with me throughout our journey of prototyping a great design thinking organization. And Jessica Tien for taking all those things off my plate so I never have to worry about them.

I would also like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their feedback on earlier drafts and in particular Ashley Perez and Jamie Farshci for their patience to read and edit my messy first draft. And all those who helped me to improve the clarity and readability of this book. Any errors, omissions, and misinterpretations remain mine.

I know every author receives support from their family, but mine has been awesome and they have been the source of inspirations and I’m so thankful. We all need inspiration and watching them I find something, truly in my heart, that strives me to reach a little higher . . . dig a little deeper . . . dream a little bigger!

I truly believe we are at an important tipping point in human and economic history. This book promotes the vision that sustainable growth can only be made possible when we synthesize concepts including natural capital, creative capital, and social capital and when all are integrated into the balance sheet. This vision of a design thinking organization is founded on the mutually reinforcing and integrated principles of efficiency, equity, and reciprocity. It is the habits of mind and strategy that often prevent today’s dominant firms from reinvention.

FOREWORD

Our world is increasingly complex and difficult to interpret. Multiple forces—technological, regulatory, competitive, and so on—act on a given context to shape the rules of what is possible and probable. Uncovering the most valuable opportunities is increasingly challenging for innovators, especially those using a traditional tool kit. New product development processes typically churn out incremental, me-too solutions when more substantial innovation is needed to capture competitive advantage.

Delivering predictable, consistent, and meaningful value from innovation remains a top challenge for executives, but most find the challenge too difficult to crack. Instead companies essentially give up and rely on pure serendipity to stumble upon valuable “eureka” moments, while others default to various versions of a creative process with the hope that it will yield a great outcome. Although these approaches can certainly yield success, the repeatability needed by any large organization is quite low.

This book presents an alternative to the status quo, an alternative that some leading-edge companies have begun to adopt. Design thinking can weed through the uncertainty and anchor innovation on the fundamental drivers of customer behavior, their interactions with the surrounding ecosystem, their interactions with one another.

Although design thinking itself is not new, Idris presents a fresh look at the practical application of this competency within the modern enterprise seeking to improve its innovation performance. This book is not an academic exercise into the possibility of design but a pragmatic explanation of how design principles can be embedded into an organization to give it insight into valuable opportunities previously hidden from traditional ways of working.

This book presents a framework and way of working that accommodates the dynamism and uncertainty surrounding most decision making companies face today. It also shares a methodology on how to embed a new design thinking–based tool kit into a modern enterprise that will enable a new wave of collaboration, insight, and learning to improve the quality of decision making, the allocation of resources to the best opportunities, and ultimately the formation of a more consistent stream of value creation.

Idris challenges the philosophies that underpin the management regimes of the modern enterprise and offers an alternative that will allow companies to adapt to the forces that impact their internal and commercial performance.

This mode challenges the status quo and encourages:

Flexibility over conformity

Exploration of questions over answers

Critical thinking over key assumptions

Enablement of teams over organization structures

A focus on doing over studying

An innovation-driven company must put a different set of capability at the core of its growth engine that puts both art and science into a commercial context. This requires organizational agility and a culture of learning. Design thinking can be an effective tool to enable both of these attributes to bloom within a company culture.

This book also offers a refreshing take on the need for economic viability and design to coexist in a complementary and symbiotic way. Too often is design used as an excuse for passing over economics that do not make sense. The mere aesthetic appeal of a new product or powerful emotional connection of a new service experience cannot be used to justify an unprofitable business proposition. The models presented in the following pages offer a compelling version of design that allows for the right balance of desirability, feasibility, and economic viability.

Apple, with all of its risk taking on product form, user experience, and design, also maintains a laser-like focus on cost control, efficiency, and profit. Delighting its customer at the end of the day is the engine that drives its hardware-centric business model. Without design, there would be no business model, and without the business model there would be no design.

The need for this integrative thinking has never been greater. Technology exponentially interconnects people, places, and objects in increasingly new ways. Understanding the nature of these interactions both at the physical and emotional level will be required to unlock the value of these complex relationships.

Idris sets the bar high for companies attempting to embed into their culture. However, the rewards for success as indicated seem well worth the investment.

—Erik Roth

Erik leads McKinsey’s Global Innovation Practiceand is a partner of the firm. He is thecoauthor of Seeing What’s Next: Using theTheories of Innovation to Predict Industry Change.

Next Chapter | Table of Contents

 

 

 

Everything has changed, is changing, and will continue to change.

Ever since we figured out fire, stone tools, language, and the other great innovations of early humankind, change has been upon us. That’s why they call it evolution. That the rate of change today is arguably faster than it has ever been before is probably true. Cultural theorist Paul Virilio refers to that rate—and our pursuit of a science and logic of speed—as dromology, from the Greek dromos, meaning “to race.” For him, the speed at which change is occurring is as much about a dramatic shrinkage in space as it is of time. As our technology, transportation, communication, and other ways of being in the world become increasingly fast and efficient, the old traditions around which cultures, economies, and politics have been organized are upended.

One result of that speed is disruption. And few, if any, of the old traditions have been more disrupted in recent years than big business. In response to constant cultural turbulence and its effect on their reputation, growth, and bottom line, some large companies have turned to design thinking as a way to help them make sense of disruption and sustain competitiveness.

The sources of disruption are many, but one is obvious. As technological innovation accelerates, people, communities, organizations, and objects are more interconnected than ever before. Thanks to everything Internet, our world has shrunk and we are now very close. As a result, we talk more, share more, complain more, celebrate more, ideate more, and expect more.

This disruption has not been kind to businesses used to operating by the rules of the old model. We don’t have to watch their TV ads anymore. We don’t believe their marketing hype anymore. We don’t want to eat their junk ingredients anymore. We don’t have to buy from stores anymore. And we don’t want the best of them to just be profit machines anymore. We want more, when we want it, how we want it, and at the price we want.

It is a vibrant and definite sea change from the way business was always done, when financial profit was a driving force. Today, people are not afraid to say, Screw business as usual!—and show they mean it.

—Richard Branson

For businesses that have been most affected by recent disruptions in technology and social communication, the challenge is one of management. Originally, management was designed for a very different set of business needs: ensuring that repetitive tasks were completed, improving economic efficiency, and maximizing labor and machine productivity. Today those needs are vastly different. Why? Because we’re facing a crisis. Actually, we’re facing many crises. There are crises of competition, economy, disruptive technology, job creation, social development, and sustainability. Some are more pressing than others. The natural resources crisis is certainly more pressing than the economic crisis, and it’s getting worse as populations and their level of consumption keep growing faster than human and technological innovation can find ways of expanding what can be extracted from or produced in the natural world.

But there is also a crisis of trust and credibility. The management solutions that many leaders apply in case of emergency no longer cut it. With most overwhelmed by the complexity and scale of the problems that confront them, the true risk exposure of any organization is very difficult to assess. As a result, proven management tools and techniques are being questioned for their validity and effectiveness. Most were designed for a very different world and operate based on organizational designs well beyond their best-before date, like those pointless mission statements that are supposed to align employees. If you’ve ever wondered where such inspirational tomes originated from and what we’re supposed to do with them, now might be the time to hang them on a wall and call them antiques. Or just have a laugh with Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams, who defined a mission statement as “a long, awkward sentence that demonstrates management’s inability to think properly.”

We need a new way, one that’s smart, human, cultural, social, and agile and that puts innovation at the core of every move it makes. That way could be design thinking. They won’t teach you this at B-school or D-school, largely because these organizations suffer from the same strain of anticomplexity that haunts many big businesses. And that’s what this book is all about.

We want more, when we want it, how we want it, and the price we want.

The Butterfly Effect and Long-Range Planning

We agree that our world is changing rapidly. The future is not like the past. The way we do business today will not be the way we do it in the future. And it’s as difficult to predict the weather over the next 12 months as to predict the performance of a business.

Of course, we know that we can’t really predict the weather. Meteorologists predict changes in weather patterns by studying atmospheric patterns, compiling data, and applying what they see to predict what they think will occur. But their record of accuracy is poor beyond the short term, largely because they are relying on the present to imagine the future. In the 1960s MIT professor, mathematician, and meteorologist Edward Lorenz formulated a model of the way air moves around the atmosphere, measuring changes in temperature, pressure, and velocity. Stripping the weather down to 12 differential equations, working through reams of printed numbers, and plotting simple charts, he discovered that slight differences in one variable could have a profound impact on the outcome of an entire system. By modeling weather, Lorenz discovered not only the fundamental mechanism of deterministic chaos—sensitive dependence on initial conditions or the “butterfly effect”—but also that long-term weather forecasting was impossible.

Similarly, much of what we do in business strategy and planning is an attempt to predict the future based on the present and the past. Despite pouring millions of dollars into enterprise resource planning systems, however, we can only project three to six months into the future at best with any reasonable accuracy. Why? Because most business leaders are averse to chaos, are overly linear, and are disconnected from global ripples not directly related to the world of business.

We are all more connected than we know. Whether it’s business or any other systems-level organizational challenge, design thinking helps us appreciate and make sense of the complex connections between people, places, objects, events, and ideas. This is the most powerful driver of innovation. It’s what guides long-range strategic planning. It’s what shapes business decisions that have to be based on future opportunities rather than past events. It’s what sparks the imagination. And it’s what reveals true value.

Applied Design Thinking Is Strategic Innovation