Principles Not Methods
A number of design thinking tools exist – often in the form of method cards. While these cards are handy for design-thinking types, they tend to create complexity for business folks who just want to get work done.
After months of teaching design thinking methods to product teams, I realized the immediate value was helping them understand which way to navigate: getting more customer empathy, coming up with more diverse ideas, narrowing and prioritizing, or experimenting to learn quickly.
Indicators that more empathy is needed:
- We’ve asked customers what they need and built it.
- We don’t know how important this problem/solution is for this customer.
Indicators that more broad thinking is needed:
- We have one great solution we think will work.
- We are really comfortable with all of the ideas we’ve come up with.
Indicators that the team needs to narrow:
- We have lots of ideas, but are having trouble recognizing the great ones.
- We are unable to make our prioritization decisions “stick.”
Indicators that the team needs to rapidly experiment with customers:
- It’s difficult to distinguish facts from opinions and guesses.
- We don’t know which customer problem to solve first.
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Having your team intentionally select and focus on a direction accelerates learning and the liklihood of delivering solutions that delight customers.
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