Talk given at UXNZ 2016, exploring key "edges" of practice we are exploring in co-design in Aotearoa. With thanks to all the community members and practitioner who shared their experiences in this talk.
Talk Abstract:
Across Aotearoa (New Zealand), co-design is rapidly being adopted in public and community contexts to tackle complex national issues and policies such as youth employment; smoking cessation; community health and wellbeing; homelessness
and family violence.
Many of these are large-scale, complex social change innovations and experiments that bring together new groups of people, which means working together in new ways. The opportunity to scale co-design to help address systemic national social challenges is both awesome and terrifying. This talk highlights some of the key trends, changes, opportunities and challenges emerging in co-design for social innovation and social outcomes in Aotearoa.
Design for Social Innovation A Brief OverviewPenny Hagen
This presentation is a quick introduction and overview of Design for Social Innovation, including some local examples. The presentation was developed for students of the Design and Business Major at Auckland University of Technology and aims to help show how design extends and is adapted for the challenges of social innovation - with an emphasis on community involvement, collaboration and ownership of 'design' and 'change'.
As the world’s problems become more interconnected and complex, there is an increasingly large role for engineers to play in the realm of innovation, both in the business and social sector. Speaking to the students of the DEEP Summer Engineering Academy, I go through various case studies of social innovation.
Design as Social Capital.
All good design leads to Social Capital. It is at the core of everything we design. Some call that process the user-centred design and some as human-centred design. The notion of social capital relies on building solutions that are based on Reciprocity, Trust and Cooperation.
A lot of the population in India still does not have access to the basic amenities in life, and when we talk of building solutions that are going to be useful in these contexts, the Social Capital is something that one cannot ignore.
When working in the development sector, towards creating solutions that have high impact and are long lasting, one should seek help from Social Capital.
These are the Slides from my talk at the UX India 2016 conference, where I put out an open call to the UX community to leverage the notion of Social Capital and build highly impacting solutions.
A keynote presentation given on October 21 at LIANZA13, The Library and Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa Conference, 2013. The talk explored how design strategies and tools offer us ways to work with our communities to co-design and re-think our approach to future services, and even to defining the role and purpose of our organisations. This has a particular relevance for libraries who are facing significant changes to their traditional service models, and are in the (ongoing) process of evolving, redefining and extending their role and purpose in response to things like changing user needs, digitisation and new channels for search and discovery.
See the programme http://www.lianza.org.nz/news-events/conferences/lianza-conference-2013/programme
See the abstract http://www.lianza.org.nz/sites/lianza.org.nz/files/keynote_2_penny_hagen.pdf
Talk given at UXNZ 2016, exploring key "edges" of practice we are exploring in co-design in Aotearoa. With thanks to all the community members and practitioner who shared their experiences in this talk.
Talk Abstract:
Across Aotearoa (New Zealand), co-design is rapidly being adopted in public and community contexts to tackle complex national issues and policies such as youth employment; smoking cessation; community health and wellbeing; homelessness
and family violence.
Many of these are large-scale, complex social change innovations and experiments that bring together new groups of people, which means working together in new ways. The opportunity to scale co-design to help address systemic national social challenges is both awesome and terrifying. This talk highlights some of the key trends, changes, opportunities and challenges emerging in co-design for social innovation and social outcomes in Aotearoa.
Design for Social Innovation A Brief OverviewPenny Hagen
This presentation is a quick introduction and overview of Design for Social Innovation, including some local examples. The presentation was developed for students of the Design and Business Major at Auckland University of Technology and aims to help show how design extends and is adapted for the challenges of social innovation - with an emphasis on community involvement, collaboration and ownership of 'design' and 'change'.
As the world’s problems become more interconnected and complex, there is an increasingly large role for engineers to play in the realm of innovation, both in the business and social sector. Speaking to the students of the DEEP Summer Engineering Academy, I go through various case studies of social innovation.
Design as Social Capital.
All good design leads to Social Capital. It is at the core of everything we design. Some call that process the user-centred design and some as human-centred design. The notion of social capital relies on building solutions that are based on Reciprocity, Trust and Cooperation.
A lot of the population in India still does not have access to the basic amenities in life, and when we talk of building solutions that are going to be useful in these contexts, the Social Capital is something that one cannot ignore.
When working in the development sector, towards creating solutions that have high impact and are long lasting, one should seek help from Social Capital.
These are the Slides from my talk at the UX India 2016 conference, where I put out an open call to the UX community to leverage the notion of Social Capital and build highly impacting solutions.
A keynote presentation given on October 21 at LIANZA13, The Library and Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa Conference, 2013. The talk explored how design strategies and tools offer us ways to work with our communities to co-design and re-think our approach to future services, and even to defining the role and purpose of our organisations. This has a particular relevance for libraries who are facing significant changes to their traditional service models, and are in the (ongoing) process of evolving, redefining and extending their role and purpose in response to things like changing user needs, digitisation and new channels for search and discovery.
See the programme http://www.lianza.org.nz/news-events/conferences/lianza-conference-2013/programme
See the abstract http://www.lianza.org.nz/sites/lianza.org.nz/files/keynote_2_penny_hagen.pdf
Taking the next step: Building Organisational Co-design CapabilityPenny Hagen
A presentation on building organisational co-design capability, shared as part of Master Class for Design 4 Social Innovation Conference in Sydney, 2014. http://design4socialinnovation.com.au/
For a little more context on the slides and the handout used as the basis for discussion in the MasterClass see: http://www.smallfire.co.nz/2014/10/22/building-organisational-co-design-capability/
Flourishing Societies Framework - DwD Workshop Peter Jones
How might we move or collective thinking and action beyond single-issue social action?
Does it make sense to build our urban worlds and future societies by winning one political issue at a time?
Can we design civic business models for our cities and society?
All social services, determinants of health, and economics are complex and interrelated. So why do we expect any political body or activist group to get it right? Only meaningfully diverse, multi-stakeholder groups can envision the variety of interests and outcomes in complex social systems. In February's Design with Dialogue Peter Jones workshops tools for co-creating civic design proposals.
A significant design challenge of our time is anticipating the relationships of multiple environmental and social problems as a complex system of nonlinear relationships. However, we cannot think about, model or discuss the relationships well, especially in the heat of discussion with deliberative groups and decision making processes. We need not only better engagement and dialogue processes for citizen deliberative problem solving, we require relevant tools.
With the OCADU Strongly Sustainable Business Model Group and with Strategic Foresight & Innovation students we designed a relevant framework from the common language of business model tools, adapted for civic decision models for flourishing cities and settlements.
The Flourishing Cities framework adapts a design tool for strongly sustainable business models as a visual organizer for engaging stakeholders in co-creating normative operational guidance for civic groups, community planners, and local governments. Flourishing can be understood as “to live within an optimal range of human functioning, one that connotes goodness, generativity, growth, and resilience,” or as John Ehrenfeld states it:
“Flourishing is the possibility that human and other life will flourish on this planet forever.”
This visual model enables a participatory mapping of propositions, values, and preferences that might yield significantly better group decisions for sociocultural and ecological development and governance in any planning engagement.
Presented at Design Research 2017 (UX Australia). This talk explores how design research practice and protocols might shift, change or be challenged when the focus is to deliver community-led social change outcomes. The presentation draws on experiments and experiences in recent place based social innovation initiatives in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Full description. Audio to come. http://www.uxaustralia.com.au/conferences/design-research-2017/presentation/design-research-as-a-social-change-process/
Precarity Pilot: exceedig precarising models of design practiceBrave New Alps
These slides were part of our presentation at the Annual American Geographers meeting: Making Other Worlds Possible V - The Role of Disruptive Innovation and New Political Imaginaries, Chicago, 21 April 2015
This presentation was given at Camberwell College of Art, University of London, as part of the BA contextual studies course The Expanded Designer. It was part of the presentations grouped around the topic of Power.
What is service design & how is it different from UX design?IxDA Chicago
April Starr, Adjunct Faculty at the Institute of Design, talked about the growing field of service design & how it differs from user experience design at the monthly event of the Interaction Design Association's local Chicago chapter (IxDA Chicago).
Steven Ames Accelerating Change Community Visioning Part Two April 2104Engage2
During this stage of the Community Visioning masterclass (light) delivered to NSW Planning, Steve spoke to the importance of re-engaging stakeholders to co-design projects that could be co-delivered to accelerate the envisioned change.
Culture Work: Organizational Becoming Made PracticalMarc Rettig
Notes and visuals from Marc Rettig's keynote talk at the 2015 UX Advantage conference. Marc seeks to deepen the conversation about fostering design culture in organizations by providing a process definition of "design," a layered definition of "culture," and insights about the interplay between design capacity and organizational culture.
Formatted as a letter-sized document rather than a slide deck. Combines all speaker's notes with visuals from the slides.
Also available as a web article on Medium: https://medium.com/@mrettig/culture-work-283223dce016
Social Intrapreneurs : Driving Change from WithinJean-Yves Huwart
Heather Dietz is an expert in social intrapreneurship for Imaginals. She has worked with companies such as Nike. Her presentation, given at the Intrapreneurship Conference 2012 (Paris, Dec 13), mention, a.o., the Ashoka Changemakers project.
Designing Futures to Flourish: ISSS 2015 keynotePeter Jones
We now find ourselves as a systems thinking community inquiring into planetary governance for climate and ecological politics. The Anthropocene demands a planetary response, and yet we often find even our fellow travelers tethered to discourses of technological management, cultural change, and right action. We might now advocate a stronger role for social systems design as a process for continual engagement of citizen stakeholders, and between these citizens and policy makers, as advocated by Christakis, Ulrich and others. As we have seen power (economic and political) separate from its cultural histories, and become globalized, we may find ourselves in trajectories of action but with marginal power to effect societal outcomes.
We are faced with a dual mandate of restorative system design, recovering human needs in our communities, and policy system design, restoring the long historical arc toward democratic governance. And as these are both designable contexts, systemic design can integrate ecological, technological and design thinking to guide policy in more productive ways.
• We find ourselves captured in the politics of solutionism. Most presentations of the “problems” as stated before us reveal a trajectory of preferred solutions and their possible shortcomings.
• Climate change, even the entire Anthropocene aeonic perspective, represents a problematique of multiple effects systems. We are bound up in political discourses of “system change” and do not share a compelling common view of a flourishing world. We seem unable to reregister the most compelling societal choices and drivers save carbon mitigation.
• We have not conducted, to my knowledge, a substantial stakeholder discovery that extends beyond the immediate and obvious primary combatants in the climate change wars.
• As citizens and political actors on the planetary stage, we have been afraid or unable to present a clear view of the risk scenarios, possible governance strategies, or a normative plan for serious global investment. If the planet were a business concern, it would be in receivership by now.
Presentation by Peter Jones at RSD4 Banff, Alberta, 2015. Society can be defined as an object of culture, as culture is a medium for the collective development of social systems. Societies are not designed by a deliberative process, but are social entities that emerge over time as response to historicity and cultural development, and function largely by tacit agreement as observed in social norms.
In the 1960’s social systemicists such as Ozbekhan, Fuller, and Doxiadis advocated deliberative civic planning as a normative science for designing sustainable and preferable societies and settlements. Even though their original methodologies of normative planning (Ozbekhan), anticipatory design science (Fuller) and ekistics (Doxiadis) did not gain the results hoped in applications over time, these arguments could be lodged against most systems methodologies. Yet when we consider their views of the human capacity to design future outcomes as a serious social and political project, we in our fragmented polities in the postmodern era might take heed. An argument follows that we, as cultural innovators in our own societies, having access to the wisdom of successful past transitions or redirections, have also failed to motivate and enact changes requisite to our common concerns.
A systemic design approach is proposed toward constructing such idealizations as a necessary initial condition. The approach reconciles wisdom from our sociocultural histories with collaborative design practices of the current era to construct shared pathways to desired and feasible societal futures.
This presentation was held by Fabio Sergio, Creative Director at global innovation firm frog design, at Media Futures 2009 conference in London. His story: In a world where media is global,
social, ubiquitous and cheap, all forms of entertainment are melding into
a single-platform ‘story engine’. Also, Fabio reviews "TV Chatter", frog design's new social TV application for the iPhone, based around Twitter (www.tvchatterapp.com).
Taking the next step: Building Organisational Co-design CapabilityPenny Hagen
A presentation on building organisational co-design capability, shared as part of Master Class for Design 4 Social Innovation Conference in Sydney, 2014. http://design4socialinnovation.com.au/
For a little more context on the slides and the handout used as the basis for discussion in the MasterClass see: http://www.smallfire.co.nz/2014/10/22/building-organisational-co-design-capability/
Flourishing Societies Framework - DwD Workshop Peter Jones
How might we move or collective thinking and action beyond single-issue social action?
Does it make sense to build our urban worlds and future societies by winning one political issue at a time?
Can we design civic business models for our cities and society?
All social services, determinants of health, and economics are complex and interrelated. So why do we expect any political body or activist group to get it right? Only meaningfully diverse, multi-stakeholder groups can envision the variety of interests and outcomes in complex social systems. In February's Design with Dialogue Peter Jones workshops tools for co-creating civic design proposals.
A significant design challenge of our time is anticipating the relationships of multiple environmental and social problems as a complex system of nonlinear relationships. However, we cannot think about, model or discuss the relationships well, especially in the heat of discussion with deliberative groups and decision making processes. We need not only better engagement and dialogue processes for citizen deliberative problem solving, we require relevant tools.
With the OCADU Strongly Sustainable Business Model Group and with Strategic Foresight & Innovation students we designed a relevant framework from the common language of business model tools, adapted for civic decision models for flourishing cities and settlements.
The Flourishing Cities framework adapts a design tool for strongly sustainable business models as a visual organizer for engaging stakeholders in co-creating normative operational guidance for civic groups, community planners, and local governments. Flourishing can be understood as “to live within an optimal range of human functioning, one that connotes goodness, generativity, growth, and resilience,” or as John Ehrenfeld states it:
“Flourishing is the possibility that human and other life will flourish on this planet forever.”
This visual model enables a participatory mapping of propositions, values, and preferences that might yield significantly better group decisions for sociocultural and ecological development and governance in any planning engagement.
Presented at Design Research 2017 (UX Australia). This talk explores how design research practice and protocols might shift, change or be challenged when the focus is to deliver community-led social change outcomes. The presentation draws on experiments and experiences in recent place based social innovation initiatives in Aotearoa New Zealand.
Full description. Audio to come. http://www.uxaustralia.com.au/conferences/design-research-2017/presentation/design-research-as-a-social-change-process/
Precarity Pilot: exceedig precarising models of design practiceBrave New Alps
These slides were part of our presentation at the Annual American Geographers meeting: Making Other Worlds Possible V - The Role of Disruptive Innovation and New Political Imaginaries, Chicago, 21 April 2015
This presentation was given at Camberwell College of Art, University of London, as part of the BA contextual studies course The Expanded Designer. It was part of the presentations grouped around the topic of Power.
What is service design & how is it different from UX design?IxDA Chicago
April Starr, Adjunct Faculty at the Institute of Design, talked about the growing field of service design & how it differs from user experience design at the monthly event of the Interaction Design Association's local Chicago chapter (IxDA Chicago).
Steven Ames Accelerating Change Community Visioning Part Two April 2104Engage2
During this stage of the Community Visioning masterclass (light) delivered to NSW Planning, Steve spoke to the importance of re-engaging stakeholders to co-design projects that could be co-delivered to accelerate the envisioned change.
Culture Work: Organizational Becoming Made PracticalMarc Rettig
Notes and visuals from Marc Rettig's keynote talk at the 2015 UX Advantage conference. Marc seeks to deepen the conversation about fostering design culture in organizations by providing a process definition of "design," a layered definition of "culture," and insights about the interplay between design capacity and organizational culture.
Formatted as a letter-sized document rather than a slide deck. Combines all speaker's notes with visuals from the slides.
Also available as a web article on Medium: https://medium.com/@mrettig/culture-work-283223dce016
Social Intrapreneurs : Driving Change from WithinJean-Yves Huwart
Heather Dietz is an expert in social intrapreneurship for Imaginals. She has worked with companies such as Nike. Her presentation, given at the Intrapreneurship Conference 2012 (Paris, Dec 13), mention, a.o., the Ashoka Changemakers project.
Designing Futures to Flourish: ISSS 2015 keynotePeter Jones
We now find ourselves as a systems thinking community inquiring into planetary governance for climate and ecological politics. The Anthropocene demands a planetary response, and yet we often find even our fellow travelers tethered to discourses of technological management, cultural change, and right action. We might now advocate a stronger role for social systems design as a process for continual engagement of citizen stakeholders, and between these citizens and policy makers, as advocated by Christakis, Ulrich and others. As we have seen power (economic and political) separate from its cultural histories, and become globalized, we may find ourselves in trajectories of action but with marginal power to effect societal outcomes.
We are faced with a dual mandate of restorative system design, recovering human needs in our communities, and policy system design, restoring the long historical arc toward democratic governance. And as these are both designable contexts, systemic design can integrate ecological, technological and design thinking to guide policy in more productive ways.
• We find ourselves captured in the politics of solutionism. Most presentations of the “problems” as stated before us reveal a trajectory of preferred solutions and their possible shortcomings.
• Climate change, even the entire Anthropocene aeonic perspective, represents a problematique of multiple effects systems. We are bound up in political discourses of “system change” and do not share a compelling common view of a flourishing world. We seem unable to reregister the most compelling societal choices and drivers save carbon mitigation.
• We have not conducted, to my knowledge, a substantial stakeholder discovery that extends beyond the immediate and obvious primary combatants in the climate change wars.
• As citizens and political actors on the planetary stage, we have been afraid or unable to present a clear view of the risk scenarios, possible governance strategies, or a normative plan for serious global investment. If the planet were a business concern, it would be in receivership by now.
Presentation by Peter Jones at RSD4 Banff, Alberta, 2015. Society can be defined as an object of culture, as culture is a medium for the collective development of social systems. Societies are not designed by a deliberative process, but are social entities that emerge over time as response to historicity and cultural development, and function largely by tacit agreement as observed in social norms.
In the 1960’s social systemicists such as Ozbekhan, Fuller, and Doxiadis advocated deliberative civic planning as a normative science for designing sustainable and preferable societies and settlements. Even though their original methodologies of normative planning (Ozbekhan), anticipatory design science (Fuller) and ekistics (Doxiadis) did not gain the results hoped in applications over time, these arguments could be lodged against most systems methodologies. Yet when we consider their views of the human capacity to design future outcomes as a serious social and political project, we in our fragmented polities in the postmodern era might take heed. An argument follows that we, as cultural innovators in our own societies, having access to the wisdom of successful past transitions or redirections, have also failed to motivate and enact changes requisite to our common concerns.
A systemic design approach is proposed toward constructing such idealizations as a necessary initial condition. The approach reconciles wisdom from our sociocultural histories with collaborative design practices of the current era to construct shared pathways to desired and feasible societal futures.
This presentation was held by Fabio Sergio, Creative Director at global innovation firm frog design, at Media Futures 2009 conference in London. His story: In a world where media is global,
social, ubiquitous and cheap, all forms of entertainment are melding into
a single-platform ‘story engine’. Also, Fabio reviews "TV Chatter", frog design's new social TV application for the iPhone, based around Twitter (www.tvchatterapp.com).
Zhivar Door Company is located in Iran, Tehran.
Since 2013, It is started to produce variety doors by using the world's most updated machines.
Zhivar products are divided into three categories, Glass Doors, Wooden Doors and Closet Doors.
You may download each separately.
Designing Our Future: Technologies and Behaviors that Impact DesignMarci Ikeler
As our world becomes increasingly digital, experience design is more important than ever.
And, as experience design gains importance, the discipline and its tools are evolving. The very definition has broadened: rather than considering point-and-click interfaces, experience design is about the way that we engage with technology, the world, and ourselves. As such, it’s no longer the domain of a single expert (a UX designer, IA, or IxD); it’s a view of the broader world that every role must consider.
At Little Arrows, we’re passionate about identifying places where real behavior and technology intersect, and designing solutions to take advantage of these opportunities. These trends in experience design are what we’re excited about for the future.
Topics covered include:
- Everything is an Interface - new interfaces beyond the mouse and screen
- Friction-Free Commerce - evolving ways to pay
- Mobile First, Mobile Everywhere - how mobile interfaces impact design
- Physical / Digital - the disappearing boundaries between the physical and digital worlds
- Surfacing Data - new ways of understanding and consuming information
- Better, Faster, Stronger - how technology can improve our bodies and our selves
How can an industry that places empathy at the core of its practice ignore the big problems facing South Africa and the continent? In a rapidly changing design landscape will UX designers even be relevant in the future? UX designers exist at a unique interdisciplinary juncture and it gives us the opportunity to create inspiring responses to these questions. With the maturity of design thinking, social innovation, and lean startup, we are uniquely placed to re-apply our skills to find new relevance and greater impact in doing work that matters. But taking action is not easy, even if it can be known what is to be done. In this talk David will explore the new mindsets, skills and attitudes UX designers need to adopt to shift from merely doing design to becoming design activists.
Identify present & future urban challenges. Use design thinking to prototype solutions. Develop leadership to bring them back to your context. Register now!
Identify present & future urban challenges. Use design thinking to prototype solutions. Develop leadership to bring them back to your context. Register now!
How Can Society Impact Design? https://designimpactmovement.titan.in/designimpactmovement1
"How Can Society Impact Design? Explore the dynamic relationship between societal influences and design evolution in the context of India with 'Design Impact India.' This thought-provoking exploration delves into the ways in which cultural, economic, and social factors shape the world of design. Uncover the transformative power that societal values and aspirations wield over creative processes, pushing the boundaries of innovation and inspiring meaningful solutions. Join us on a journey that transcends aesthetics, illustrating how the intricate tapestry of Indian society weaves itself into the very fabric of design, leaving an indelible 'Design Impact India'."
Social Capital is an important outcome of any design process. Designers should seek more from it. In the age of smart devices and systems, we seem to forget about the social capital, for our notion of being 'social' itself has changed. In the context of Social Enterprise, we have to rely on it a lot more, for working in the development sector comes with its own set of challenges.
These are the slides from my today's talk at Adobe India (Noida) office. 17th August 2016.
Restart+ Module 3 Placemaking a Powerful Tool for Community Regenerationcaniceconsulting
In this module, we explore placemaking as a process for community regeneration.
We focus in detail on the four main types of placemaking and hone in on how each one works. We look at some great real life applications of these in communities.
In the final section, we provide you with a pack of useful exercises and templates to help you start using placemaking in the planning of your new regeneration project/s!
Keynote #3 when policy meets design by jung joo leeux singapore
In this talk, Jung-Joo will highlight what design can do for public service and policy development, and eventually transform the government to be more human-centered. Jung-Joo will illustrate this through her recent collaboration project with the Ministry of Manpower Singapore.
This paper talks about the impact of innovation on the upliftment of society. It aims to highlight how efficiency and innovation go hand-in-hand and how to look at innovation in terms of art and science. It also throws light on using the life-centered design approach for innovation to solve modern-day challenges.
Download Whitepaper Now: https://www.tntra.io/whitepaper-pdf/innovation-life-centred-design-and-societal-progress.pdf
Architecting the Information of Society: From Projects to PursuitDan Cooney
Here's a talk I gave at WIAD Ann Arbor 2014. I was wondering how information architects might get involved with addressing the wicked problems of our shared global society.
Video of the talk is here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8qTdvqFuj7s
Prioritizing the Implementation of Social Initiatives- Criticism of Local Pr...AmeerahFussi1
Based on 4 years of experience in the fields of community programs and initiatives in various organizations, I share with you my conclusion, towards explaining how can we taking an objective decision and prioritizing the implementation of community projects and initiatives in a simplified and systematic manner, by evaluating the social challenge dimensions for which this project or initiative was established.
Hello everyone! I am thrilled to present my latest portfolio on LinkedIn, marking the culmination of my architectural journey thus far. Over the span of five years, I've been fortunate to acquire a wealth of knowledge under the guidance of esteemed professors and industry mentors. From rigorous academic pursuits to practical engagements, each experience has contributed to my growth and refinement as an architecture student. This portfolio not only showcases my projects but also underscores my attention to detail and to innovative architecture as a profession.
Dive into the innovative world of smart garages with our insightful presentation, "Exploring the Future of Smart Garages." This comprehensive guide covers the latest advancements in garage technology, including automated systems, smart security features, energy efficiency solutions, and seamless integration with smart home ecosystems. Learn how these technologies are transforming traditional garages into high-tech, efficient spaces that enhance convenience, safety, and sustainability.
Ideal for homeowners, tech enthusiasts, and industry professionals, this presentation provides valuable insights into the trends, benefits, and future developments in smart garage technology. Stay ahead of the curve with our expert analysis and practical tips on implementing smart garage solutions.
Book Formatting: Quality Control Checks for DesignersConfidence Ago
This presentation was made to help designers who work in publishing houses or format books for printing ensure quality.
Quality control is vital to every industry. This is why every department in a company need create a method they use in ensuring quality. This, perhaps, will not only improve the quality of products and bring errors to the barest minimum, but take it to a near perfect finish.
It is beyond a moot point that a good book will somewhat be judged by its cover, but the content of the book remains king. No matter how beautiful the cover, if the quality of writing or presentation is off, that will be a reason for readers not to come back to the book or recommend it.
So, this presentation points designers to some important things that may be missed by an editor that they could eventually discover and call the attention of the editor.
Top 5 Indian Style Modular Kitchen DesignsFinzo Kitchens
Get the perfect modular kitchen in Gurgaon at Finzo! We offer high-quality, custom-designed kitchens at the best prices. Wardrobes and home & office furniture are also available. Free consultation! Best Quality Luxury Modular kitchen in Gurgaon available at best price. All types of Modular Kitchens are available U Shaped Modular kitchens, L Shaped Modular Kitchen, G Shaped Modular Kitchens, Inline Modular Kitchens and Italian Modular Kitchen.
7. “The success of
development programs
cannot be judged
merely in terms of their
affects on income and
outputs, and must, on a
basic level focus on the
lives people can lead.”
Amartya Sen