PDF, audio, and voiceover are now available on designintechreport.wordpress.com
Today’s most beloved technology products and services balance design and engineering in a way that perfectly blends form and function. Businesses started by designers have created billions of dollars of value, are raising billions in capital, and VC firms increasingly see the importance of design. The third annual Design in Tech Report examines how design trends are revolutionizing the entrepreneurial and corporate ecosystems in tech. This report covers related M&A activity, new patterns in creativity × business, and the rise of computational design.
PDF, audio, and voiceover will be available on designintechreport.wordpress.com
Today’s most beloved technology products and services balance design and engineering in a way that perfectly blends form and function. Businesses started by designers have created billions of dollars of value, are raising billions in capital, and VC firms increasingly see the importance of design. The third annual Design in Tech Report examines how design trends are revolutionizing the entrepreneurial and corporate ecosystems in tech. This report covers related M&A activity, new patterns in creativity × business, and the rise of computational design.
Laura Mocanu of Elite Vision Coaching has an impressive background as a Marketing Professional in her native Romania. This combined with her own career change and a passion for continuing education sets the tone for her work. A business mentor for the Prince’s Trust and Well Being Officer for NIAMH, her own trajectory is an excellent model for what it takes a client to maximize their potential and illustrative of the "Design Thinking" she teaches.
An audio of this presentation can be found at: https://www.dropbox.com/s/v6x32tx449nofqi/14%20Laura%20Mocanu.mp3?dl=0
www.evisioncoaching.co.uk
@EVisionCoaching
Design Thinking: A Quick Course in Creative Problem SolvingSpring Studio
Mary Wharmby, a UX Design Director at our agency, taught at UC Berkeley’s one-day educational event RGB 2015. In this presentation, she walked students through the foundations of design thinking, from understanding your users to iterating solutions. The deck, complete with speaker notes, provides a quick snapshot of the most important principles behind using design to solve problems.
A summary of the basic principles of design thinking, human centered innovation and its application to strategy. Created by Natalie Nixon of Figure 8 Thinking.
PDF, audio, and voiceover will be available on designintechreport.wordpress.com
Today’s most beloved technology products and services balance design and engineering in a way that perfectly blends form and function. Businesses started by designers have created billions of dollars of value, are raising billions in capital, and VC firms increasingly see the importance of design. The third annual Design in Tech Report examines how design trends are revolutionizing the entrepreneurial and corporate ecosystems in tech. This report covers related M&A activity, new patterns in creativity × business, and the rise of computational design.
Laura Mocanu of Elite Vision Coaching has an impressive background as a Marketing Professional in her native Romania. This combined with her own career change and a passion for continuing education sets the tone for her work. A business mentor for the Prince’s Trust and Well Being Officer for NIAMH, her own trajectory is an excellent model for what it takes a client to maximize their potential and illustrative of the "Design Thinking" she teaches.
An audio of this presentation can be found at: https://www.dropbox.com/s/v6x32tx449nofqi/14%20Laura%20Mocanu.mp3?dl=0
www.evisioncoaching.co.uk
@EVisionCoaching
Design Thinking: A Quick Course in Creative Problem SolvingSpring Studio
Mary Wharmby, a UX Design Director at our agency, taught at UC Berkeley’s one-day educational event RGB 2015. In this presentation, she walked students through the foundations of design thinking, from understanding your users to iterating solutions. The deck, complete with speaker notes, provides a quick snapshot of the most important principles behind using design to solve problems.
A summary of the basic principles of design thinking, human centered innovation and its application to strategy. Created by Natalie Nixon of Figure 8 Thinking.
This is the updated version of my successful Interaction 14 talk: http://www.slideshare.net/folletto/the-shift-ux-designers-as-business-consultants
UX is a broad field and designers are increasingly playing a strategic role in many companies. Be that designer.
Businesses are increasingly adopting user-centered approaches to create experiences, moving UX design to be one of the core activities driving the company strategy and operations.
This is an incredibly valuable opportunity that we designers can take to step up and contribute to create the great experiences and services they envision, taking our vision, tools and understanding to a different level. But we need to learn the new skills to play at this table, a table that's often speaking a different language with a lot of politics and different stakeholders.
This is a short talk and workshop (30' + 90') to give a first introduction to design thinking. Gives theory foundation, notes a few different approaches, and then dives into one of them.
This presentation was first done at ImpactON / StartupChile evening in 2015.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
WTF - Why the Future Is Up to Us - pptx versionTim O'Reilly
This is the talk I gave January 12, 2017 at the G20/OECD Conference on the Digital Future in Berlin. I talk about fitness landscapes as applied to technology and business, the role of unchecked financialization in the state of our politics and economy, and why technology really wants to create jobs, not destroy them. (There is a separate PDF version, but some readers said the notes were too fuzzy to read.)
Lightning Talk #9: How UX and Data Storytelling Can Shape Policy by Mika Aldabaux singapore
How can we take UX and Data Storytelling out of the tech context and use them to change the way government behaves?
Showcasing the truth is the highest goal of data storytelling. Because the design of a chart can affect the interpretation of data in a major way, one must wield visual tools with care and deliberation. Using quantitative facts to evoke an emotional response is best achieved with the combination of UX and data storytelling.
December 2017 presentation covering: What is design thinking? What does it look like in practice? What are some case stories of design thinking being used in the real world? How can we use design thinking in our organization? Where can I learn more?
Centre for Entrepreneurship (C4E) of the University of Cyprus and Berklee Institute for Creative Entrepreneurship (ICE) present the:
Why are some designs better than others, and what can you do about it? (The workshop)
If you've ever described a poster as heavy, a website as dense, an app as clumsy or an object as whimsical, you probably already know the answer. Recent psychology research is showing that experiential metaphors are key emotional drivers that impact our perception of the world. Applying these findings to design confirms what designers have learned throughout their careers—good design is subconscious first and rational second. Michael will share stories from this research and the IDEO portfolio then share tools to help you be more consciously subconscious.
Design Thinking: The one thing that will transform the way you thinkDigital Surgeons
What's the one thing that will transform the way you think? Design Thinking. The startups, trailblazers, and business mavericks of our world have embraced this process as a means of zeroing in on true human-centered design.
Design Thinking is a methodology for innovators that taps into the two biggest skills needed in today’s modern workplace: critical thinking & problem solving.
Of course, if you ask 100 practitioners to define it, you’ll wind up with 101 definitions.
Pete Sena of Digital Surgeons believes that Design Thinking is a process for solving complex problems through observation and iteration. At its core, he describes it as a vehicle for solving human wants and needs.
Minds are like parachutes; they only function when open. Thomas Dewar was a Scottish whiskey distiller.
Communicating ideas or insights is often the hardest part of the design process. And PowerPoint and Excel spreadsheets are limited in their ability to do this. But the communication tools used in Design Thinking—maps, models, sketches, and stories—help to capture and express the information required to form and socialize meaning in a very straightforward, human way.
The Five things that all definitions of Design Thinking have in common:
1. Isolating and reframing the problem focused on the user.
2. Empathy. A design practitioner from IDEO, the popular design and innovation firm strapped a video camera to his head and it was only then that he recognized why the ceiling is such an important factor when working with hospital patients. As a patient you lay in bed and stare at it all day. It’s these little details and true empathy that can only be realized by putting oneself in the user’s shoes.
3. Approach things with an open mind and be willing to collaborate. Creativity with purpose is a team sport.
4. Curiosity. We have to harness our inner 5-year-old here and really be inquisitive explorers. Instead of seeing what would be or what should be, consider what COULD be.
5 - Commitment. Brainstorming is easy. It’s easy to want to start a business or solve a problem. Seeing it into market and making it successful is not for the faint of heart. We’ve all read about big “wins” (multi-billion dollar acquisitions like Instagram and WhatsApp). What we don’t read about are people like Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers, who work for years before becoming industry sensations.
Pete describes what he refers to as the “Wheel of Innovation” as a process that continuously focuses on framing, making, validating, and improving on your concept. Be it as small as a core feature in your product down to the business model and business idea itself.
Design is about form and function, not art.
What are the business benefits for Design Innovation?
IDEO started an idea revolution when they coined this phrase DESIGN THINKING. Organizations ranging from early-stage startups up to Fortune 50 organizations have capitalized on this iterative appr
Design Thinking in Solving Problem - HCMC Scrum Breakfast - July 27, 2019Scrum Breakfast Vietnam
Did you know that Design Thinking is one of the most advantageous processes in dealing with difficulties?
Particularly true for developers, who always lean on teamwork to solve problems, Design Thinking becomes more important as it helps boost team’s performance to the next level after all.
Join this Scrum Breakfast event now if you are finding a practical and effective problem–solving way!!
– Topic: Design thinking in solving problems
The basic concept of Design Thinking
How the entire Design Thinking process works
How Design Thinking helps in understanding problems from customer’s perspective
How Design Thinking helps in defining and brainstorming solutions
– Speaker: Mr. Nhung Ngo – Scrum Master at Axon Active Vietnam
– Time: 09:00 AM – 11:00 AM | Saturday, 27th July 2019
– Location: Trung Nguyen coffee, 264A Nam Ky Khoi Nghia Str., District 3, HCMC
Come and enjoy this Scrum breakfast event with us now! There are free light breakfast and drinks for everyone.
FIND MORE INFORMATION HERE http://bit.ly/2FTc6XA
The technologies and people we are designing experiences for are constantly changing, in most cases they are changing at a rate that is difficult keep up with. When we think about how our teams are structured and the design processes we use in light of this challenge, a new design problem (or problem space) emerges, one that requires us to focus inward. How do we structure our teams and processes to be resilient? What would happen if we looked at our teams and design process as IA’s, Designers, Researchers? What strategies would we put in place to help them be successful? This talk will look at challenges we face leading, supporting, or simply being a part of design teams creating experiences for user groups with changing technological needs.
Moonshot thinking aims for a 10x improvement over what currently exists, instead of a mere 10% gain. It address a huge problem, proposes a radical solution, and uses breakthrough technology to make it happen.
This is the updated version of my successful Interaction 14 talk: http://www.slideshare.net/folletto/the-shift-ux-designers-as-business-consultants
UX is a broad field and designers are increasingly playing a strategic role in many companies. Be that designer.
Businesses are increasingly adopting user-centered approaches to create experiences, moving UX design to be one of the core activities driving the company strategy and operations.
This is an incredibly valuable opportunity that we designers can take to step up and contribute to create the great experiences and services they envision, taking our vision, tools and understanding to a different level. But we need to learn the new skills to play at this table, a table that's often speaking a different language with a lot of politics and different stakeholders.
This is a short talk and workshop (30' + 90') to give a first introduction to design thinking. Gives theory foundation, notes a few different approaches, and then dives into one of them.
This presentation was first done at ImpactON / StartupChile evening in 2015.
An immersive workshop at General Assembly, SF. I typically teach this workshop at General Assembly, San Francisco. To see a list of my upcoming classes, visit https://generalassemb.ly/instructors/seth-familian/4813
I also teach this workshop as a private lunch-and-learn or half-day immersive session for corporate clients. To learn more about pricing and availability, please contact me at http://familian1.com
WTF - Why the Future Is Up to Us - pptx versionTim O'Reilly
This is the talk I gave January 12, 2017 at the G20/OECD Conference on the Digital Future in Berlin. I talk about fitness landscapes as applied to technology and business, the role of unchecked financialization in the state of our politics and economy, and why technology really wants to create jobs, not destroy them. (There is a separate PDF version, but some readers said the notes were too fuzzy to read.)
Lightning Talk #9: How UX and Data Storytelling Can Shape Policy by Mika Aldabaux singapore
How can we take UX and Data Storytelling out of the tech context and use them to change the way government behaves?
Showcasing the truth is the highest goal of data storytelling. Because the design of a chart can affect the interpretation of data in a major way, one must wield visual tools with care and deliberation. Using quantitative facts to evoke an emotional response is best achieved with the combination of UX and data storytelling.
December 2017 presentation covering: What is design thinking? What does it look like in practice? What are some case stories of design thinking being used in the real world? How can we use design thinking in our organization? Where can I learn more?
Centre for Entrepreneurship (C4E) of the University of Cyprus and Berklee Institute for Creative Entrepreneurship (ICE) present the:
Why are some designs better than others, and what can you do about it? (The workshop)
If you've ever described a poster as heavy, a website as dense, an app as clumsy or an object as whimsical, you probably already know the answer. Recent psychology research is showing that experiential metaphors are key emotional drivers that impact our perception of the world. Applying these findings to design confirms what designers have learned throughout their careers—good design is subconscious first and rational second. Michael will share stories from this research and the IDEO portfolio then share tools to help you be more consciously subconscious.
Design Thinking: The one thing that will transform the way you thinkDigital Surgeons
What's the one thing that will transform the way you think? Design Thinking. The startups, trailblazers, and business mavericks of our world have embraced this process as a means of zeroing in on true human-centered design.
Design Thinking is a methodology for innovators that taps into the two biggest skills needed in today’s modern workplace: critical thinking & problem solving.
Of course, if you ask 100 practitioners to define it, you’ll wind up with 101 definitions.
Pete Sena of Digital Surgeons believes that Design Thinking is a process for solving complex problems through observation and iteration. At its core, he describes it as a vehicle for solving human wants and needs.
Minds are like parachutes; they only function when open. Thomas Dewar was a Scottish whiskey distiller.
Communicating ideas or insights is often the hardest part of the design process. And PowerPoint and Excel spreadsheets are limited in their ability to do this. But the communication tools used in Design Thinking—maps, models, sketches, and stories—help to capture and express the information required to form and socialize meaning in a very straightforward, human way.
The Five things that all definitions of Design Thinking have in common:
1. Isolating and reframing the problem focused on the user.
2. Empathy. A design practitioner from IDEO, the popular design and innovation firm strapped a video camera to his head and it was only then that he recognized why the ceiling is such an important factor when working with hospital patients. As a patient you lay in bed and stare at it all day. It’s these little details and true empathy that can only be realized by putting oneself in the user’s shoes.
3. Approach things with an open mind and be willing to collaborate. Creativity with purpose is a team sport.
4. Curiosity. We have to harness our inner 5-year-old here and really be inquisitive explorers. Instead of seeing what would be or what should be, consider what COULD be.
5 - Commitment. Brainstorming is easy. It’s easy to want to start a business or solve a problem. Seeing it into market and making it successful is not for the faint of heart. We’ve all read about big “wins” (multi-billion dollar acquisitions like Instagram and WhatsApp). What we don’t read about are people like Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers, who work for years before becoming industry sensations.
Pete describes what he refers to as the “Wheel of Innovation” as a process that continuously focuses on framing, making, validating, and improving on your concept. Be it as small as a core feature in your product down to the business model and business idea itself.
Design is about form and function, not art.
What are the business benefits for Design Innovation?
IDEO started an idea revolution when they coined this phrase DESIGN THINKING. Organizations ranging from early-stage startups up to Fortune 50 organizations have capitalized on this iterative appr
Design Thinking in Solving Problem - HCMC Scrum Breakfast - July 27, 2019Scrum Breakfast Vietnam
Did you know that Design Thinking is one of the most advantageous processes in dealing with difficulties?
Particularly true for developers, who always lean on teamwork to solve problems, Design Thinking becomes more important as it helps boost team’s performance to the next level after all.
Join this Scrum Breakfast event now if you are finding a practical and effective problem–solving way!!
– Topic: Design thinking in solving problems
The basic concept of Design Thinking
How the entire Design Thinking process works
How Design Thinking helps in understanding problems from customer’s perspective
How Design Thinking helps in defining and brainstorming solutions
– Speaker: Mr. Nhung Ngo – Scrum Master at Axon Active Vietnam
– Time: 09:00 AM – 11:00 AM | Saturday, 27th July 2019
– Location: Trung Nguyen coffee, 264A Nam Ky Khoi Nghia Str., District 3, HCMC
Come and enjoy this Scrum breakfast event with us now! There are free light breakfast and drinks for everyone.
FIND MORE INFORMATION HERE http://bit.ly/2FTc6XA
The technologies and people we are designing experiences for are constantly changing, in most cases they are changing at a rate that is difficult keep up with. When we think about how our teams are structured and the design processes we use in light of this challenge, a new design problem (or problem space) emerges, one that requires us to focus inward. How do we structure our teams and processes to be resilient? What would happen if we looked at our teams and design process as IA’s, Designers, Researchers? What strategies would we put in place to help them be successful? This talk will look at challenges we face leading, supporting, or simply being a part of design teams creating experiences for user groups with changing technological needs.
Moonshot thinking aims for a 10x improvement over what currently exists, instead of a mere 10% gain. It address a huge problem, proposes a radical solution, and uses breakthrough technology to make it happen.
A lot has changed since publishing my inaugural Design in Tech Tech report at SXSW last year. In this year's report, we dive deeper into analyzing some broader themes ranging from the record amounts of funding flowing into design-led startups to questioning how design will continue to evolve as a good business practice. Below are some takeaways from the report:
-Design isn’t just about beauty; it’s about market relevance and meaningful results.
-M&A activity continues in the design space, and it’s increased.
-Increasing the designers needed in the tech industry requires rethinking education.
-The adoption of design by public companies is only growing.
-Designers bring needed critical thinking/making in the economic case for inclusion.
-Work in the research labs from decades ago drives today’s startups. Be aware.
Today’s most beloved technology products and services balance design and engineering in a way that perfectly blends form and function. Businesses started by designers have created billions of dollars of value, are raising billions in capital, and VC firms increasingly see the importance of design. The third annual Design in Tech Report examines how design trends are revolutionizing the entrepreneurial and corporate ecosystems in tech. This report covers related M&A activity, new patterns in creativity × business, and the rise of computational design.
Computer network is a distributed system consisting of loosely coupled computers and other
devices. Any two of these devices, which we will from now on refer to as network elements or
transmitting elements, can communicate with each other through a communication medium. In
order for these connected devices to be considered a communicating network, there must be a set
of communicating rules or protocols each device in the network must follow to communicate wit
another device in the network. The resulting combination consisting of hardware and software is a computer communication network or computer network in short. Figure 1.1 shows a computer
network
React Components Lifecycle | React Tutorial for Beginners | ReactJS Training ...Edureka!
This Edureka tutorial on React Components will help you in understanding the fundamentals of components in ReactJS. This tutorial helps you learn the following topics:
1. React Components
2. Props
3. State
4. Flow Of Stateless & Stateful Component
5. Lifecycle Of Component
ReactJS Tutorial For Beginners | ReactJS Redux Training For Beginners | React...Edureka!
This Edureka ReactJS Tutorial For Beginners will help you in understanding the fundamentals of ReactJS and help you in building a strong foundation in React framework. Below are the topics covered in this tutorial:
1. Why ReactJS?
2. What Is ReactJS?
3. Advantages Of ReactJS
4. ReactJS Installation and Program
5. ReactJS Fundamentals
Design has become a game changer in Silicon Valley. This #DesignInTech Report highlights the rising importance of design in the entrepreneurial ecosystem. The report covers trends ranging from the record amounts of funding flowing into design-led startups to M&A activity with major tech corporations. Beyond designers and technologists, this report will appeal to a broad audience. For all of us who use a computer or mobile device, great design is changing how we live and work. This study helps explain why.
17 Ways to Design a Presentation People Want to ViewJim MacLeod
Tired of boring PowerPoint presentations? Me too. Here are 17 tips to help you create a presentation that not only engages the audience, but forces them to remember what you want them to remember.
No Interface? No Problem: Applying HCD Agile to Data Projects (Righi)Kath Straub
This paper will be published in the Nov 2020 Issue of Journal of Usability Studies. (https://uxpajournal.org/). Its being pre-printed here with permission from the author and the Journal Board.
In October 2019, a group of human-centered designers,
agilists, data scientists, and other technology enablement
practitioners joined to share their thoughts about a topic of
common interest: How should the principles and practices of
human-centered design, Agile development, and the
overarching process of HCDAgile be applied to products that
have no obvious user interface?
The group’s objective was to develop guidance based upon
shared knowledge across disciplines and industries for
leveraging HCDAgile in data projects. In this paper we share
our initial observations from the meeting.
Fair balance: I participated in the huddle that led to this paper, but not in writing up the paper. Thanks to Carol Righi for doing the needful.
Increasingly, companies succeed or fail not on superior technology but on superior user experience design. This talk looks at the ROI of UX design with three examples of startups that leveraged design to disrupt their fields and beat the competition.
Markovate is a Toronto based digital product and mobile app development company that aims to offer future ready, robust, and scalable mobile products to high growth companies and start ups that strive to make a difference in this era of digital transformation. We are obsessed with delivering seamless mobile experiences across multiple platforms, devices, and OS versions.
This is a presentation on Design Thinking for a Project Management audience, showing the benefits of incorporating Design Thinking on projects and providing a very high-level overview of methods and tools.
Design Thinking Comes of AgeThe approach, once.docxdonaldp2
Design
Thinking
Comes
of Age
The approach, once
used primarily in product
design, is now infusing
corporate culture.
by Jon Kolko
ARTWORK The Office for Creative Research
(Noa Younse), Band, Preliminary VisualizationSPOTLIGHT
66 Harvard Business Review September 2015
SPOTLIGHT ON THE EVOLUTION OF DESIGN THINKING
HBR.ORG
There’s a shift under way
in large organizations,
one that puts design
much closer to the
center of the enterprise.
Focus on users’ experiences, especially
their emotional ones. To build empathy with
users, a design-centric organization empowers em-
ployees to observe behavior and draw conclusions
about what people want and need. Those conclu-
sions are tremendously hard to express in quanti-
tative language. Instead, organizations that “get”
design use emotional language (words that concern
desires, aspirations, engagement, and experience)
to describe products and users. Team members
discuss the emotional resonance of a value propo-
sition as much as they discuss utility and product
requirements.
A traditional value proposition is a promise of
utility: If you buy a Lexus, the automaker promises
that you will receive safe and comfortable trans-
portation in a well-designed high-performance ve-
hicle. An emotional value proposition is a promise
of feeling: If you buy a Lexus, the automaker prom-
ises that you will feel pampered, luxurious, and af-
fluent. In design-centric organizations, emotion-
ally charged language isn’t denigrated as thin, silly,
or biased. Strategic conversations in those compa-
nies frequently address how a business decision or
a market trajectory will positively influence users’
experiences and often acknowledge only implicitly
that well-designed offerings contribute to financial
success.
The focus on great experiences isn’t limited to
product designers, marketers, and strategists—it
infuses every customer-facing function. Take
finance. Typically, its only contact with users is
through invoices and payment systems, which are
designed for internal business optimization or pre-
determined “customer requirements.” But those
systems are touch points that shape a customer’s
impression of the company. In a culture focused
on customer experience, financial touch points are
designed around users’ needs rather than internal
operational efficiencies.
Create models to examine complex prob-
lems. Design thinking, first used to make physical
objects, is increasingly being applied to complex, in-
tangible issues, such as how a customer experiences
a service. Regardless of the context, design thinkers
tend to use physical models, also known as design
artifacts, to explore, define, and communicate.
Those models—primarily diagrams and sketches—
supplement and in some cases replace the spread-
sheets, specifications, and other documents that
SPOTLIGHT ON THE EVOLUTION OF DESIGN THINKING
But the shift isn’t about aesthetics. It’s about apply-
in.
Design Thinking Comes of AgeThe approach, once.docxcuddietheresa
Design
Thinking
Comes
of Age
The approach, once
used primarily in product
design, is now infusing
corporate culture.
by Jon Kolko
ARTWORK The Office for Creative Research
(Noa Younse), Band, Preliminary VisualizationSPOTLIGHT
66 Harvard Business Review September 2015
SPOTLIGHT ON THE EVOLUTION OF DESIGN THINKING
HBR.ORG
There’s a shift under way
in large organizations,
one that puts design
much closer to the
center of the enterprise.
Focus on users’ experiences, especially
their emotional ones. To build empathy with
users, a design-centric organization empowers em-
ployees to observe behavior and draw conclusions
about what people want and need. Those conclu-
sions are tremendously hard to express in quanti-
tative language. Instead, organizations that “get”
design use emotional language (words that concern
desires, aspirations, engagement, and experience)
to describe products and users. Team members
discuss the emotional resonance of a value propo-
sition as much as they discuss utility and product
requirements.
A traditional value proposition is a promise of
utility: If you buy a Lexus, the automaker promises
that you will receive safe and comfortable trans-
portation in a well-designed high-performance ve-
hicle. An emotional value proposition is a promise
of feeling: If you buy a Lexus, the automaker prom-
ises that you will feel pampered, luxurious, and af-
fluent. In design-centric organizations, emotion-
ally charged language isn’t denigrated as thin, silly,
or biased. Strategic conversations in those compa-
nies frequently address how a business decision or
a market trajectory will positively influence users’
experiences and often acknowledge only implicitly
that well-designed offerings contribute to financial
success.
The focus on great experiences isn’t limited to
product designers, marketers, and strategists—it
infuses every customer-facing function. Take
finance. Typically, its only contact with users is
through invoices and payment systems, which are
designed for internal business optimization or pre-
determined “customer requirements.” But those
systems are touch points that shape a customer’s
impression of the company. In a culture focused
on customer experience, financial touch points are
designed around users’ needs rather than internal
operational efficiencies.
Create models to examine complex prob-
lems. Design thinking, first used to make physical
objects, is increasingly being applied to complex, in-
tangible issues, such as how a customer experiences
a service. Regardless of the context, design thinkers
tend to use physical models, also known as design
artifacts, to explore, define, and communicate.
Those models—primarily diagrams and sketches—
supplement and in some cases replace the spread-
sheets, specifications, and other documents that
SPOTLIGHT ON THE EVOLUTION OF DESIGN THINKING
But the shift isn’t about aesthetics. It’s about apply-
in ...
We are proud to announce our eighteenth Innovation Excellence Weekly for Slideshare. Inside you'll find ten of the best innovation-related articles from the past week on Innovation Excellence - the world's most popular innovation web site and home to 5,000+ innovation-related articles.
How Design Theories Evolved from User-Centered Design to Design Thinking.pdfWorxwideConsulting1
From textiles to architectural drawings to digital devices, every product is created with a function—and a user— in mind. Around mid-twentieth century, designers began considering “human factors” (also called ergonomics) to products, services, and interfaces to address human users’ needs. It has led to the evolution of designing theories and shift in designer’s point of attention.
Let’s see how?!
This presentation is targeted to architecture professionals in the design industry. The presentation is divided into four parts. The first part describes the factors at play in the future of work in architecture. The second part outlines trends in the design process for architectural offices. The third, discusses the ways where human capital investment is needed based on both trend and factors in play for the industry in the future. Lastly, a positive outlook for the future of work in the sector is outlined.
Track 09 - New publishing and scientific communication ways:
Electronic edition, digital educational resources
Authors: Ana Catarina Silva and Maria Manuel Borges
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAdQkqUYROo&list=PLboNOuyyzZ86iI_x9SRTfV1KlSRX9DcEc&index=5
Presented at Intersection18 Conference - http://intersectionconf.com/
Milan Guenther
Partner, EDA - http://enterprisedesign.io/
Author of INTERSECTION - http://the.intersectionbook.com/
"Broken customer relationships, silos and misalignment, disengaged employees, lack of purpose, operations failures, overpromising underdelivering brands, lack of trust, power play and politics, complicated systems... are symptoms of bad Enterprise Design. Any great product, service or experience relies on an enterprise designed to deliver."
Milan Guenther
When calling for contributions to our 5th conference edition, we witnessed a shift: from the undercover practice of the past, retro-fitting UX/Service Design or Business/Enterprise Architecture initiatives, to clearly scoped and mandated Enterprise Design stories. More than just a common ground, we see that applying design practice holistically and systemically can bring about innovation, and make transformation work. We found further evidence for Enterprise Design's "coming of age" in the results of our practitioner surveys on Enterprise Design definitions and artifacts.
This conference is still at the intersection of various fields. Enterprise Design questions are transversal topics for anyone concerned with Scaling Ambitious Endeavours by design: agility and self-organization, complex systems and design leadership, making links and leaps to facilitate execution.
More than ever, we believe enterprises can and need to be designed. We are engaged in building a network of practitioners around Enterprise Design as a discipline.
Milan will give an overview of the conference program and speakers, and talk about what's next in the emerging field of Enterprise Design.
Transforming Brand Perception and Boosting Profitabilityaaryangarg12
In today's digital era, the dynamics of brand perception, consumer behavior, and profitability have been profoundly reshaped by the synergy of branding, social media, and website design. This research paper investigates the transformative power of these elements in influencing how individuals perceive brands and products and how this transformation can be harnessed to drive sales and profitability for businesses.
Through an exploration of brand psychology and consumer behavior, this study sheds light on the intricate ways in which effective branding strategies, strategic social media engagement, and user-centric website design contribute to altering consumers' perceptions. We delve into the principles that underlie successful brand transformations, examining how visual identity, messaging, and storytelling can captivate and resonate with target audiences.
Methodologically, this research employs a comprehensive approach, combining qualitative and quantitative analyses. Real-world case studies illustrate the impact of branding, social media campaigns, and website redesigns on consumer perception, sales figures, and profitability. We assess the various metrics, including brand awareness, customer engagement, conversion rates, and revenue growth, to measure the effectiveness of these strategies.
The results underscore the pivotal role of cohesive branding, social media influence, and website usability in shaping positive brand perceptions, influencing consumer decisions, and ultimately bolstering sales and profitability. This paper provides actionable insights and strategic recommendations for businesses seeking to leverage branding, social media, and website design as potent tools to enhance their market position and financial success.
White wonder, Work developed by Eva TschoppMansi Shah
White Wonder by Eva Tschopp
A tale about our culture around the use of fertilizers and pesticides visiting small farms around Ahmedabad in Matar and Shilaj.
Expert Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) Drafting ServicesResDraft
Whether you’re looking to create a guest house, a rental unit, or a private retreat, our experienced team will design a space that complements your existing home and maximizes your investment. We provide personalized, comprehensive expert accessory dwelling unit (ADU)drafting solutions tailored to your needs, ensuring a seamless process from concept to completion.
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.
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.
2. With Special Thanks To
Michael Abbott (KPCB), Matt Mullenweg (AUTOMATTIC), Mark Armstrong (AUTOMATTIC)
and 800+ designers and design founders, managers, executives, agency leaders, and individual contributors.
JACKIE XU
2017 DiT Team
JOHN MAEDAAVIV GILBOA JUSTIN SAYARATH FATIMAH KABBA
3. 3
Design
in Tech
Reports The 2015 Report explained design’s rise in value to tech as due to mobile devices and the
mass-consumerization of computing. We moved from “tech-led” to “experience-led” digital
products as services on smartphones took over and gave access to everyone.
The 2016 Report showed peak growth in interest by venture capital firms in design, and
highlight significant growth in the acquisition of design agencies by consulting firms like
McKinsey & Co and Accenture. Google emerged as a new leader in design.
The 2017 Report frames computational design as a key driver of accelerated growth, with
inclusive cultures @work as vital for tech businesses hoping to lead in design.
Cumulative
Views
2M+
👀
https://designintechreport.wordpress.com@aliceQdesign
4. 4
Design isn’t just about beauty; it’s about market relevance and meaningful results.
At top business schools, design thinking is moving into the curriculum — driven by market demand.
Both McKinsey & Co and IBM have recently made appointments at their most senior levels for designers.
Adopting an inclusive design approach expands a tech product’s total addressable market.
Computational designers remain in demand at technology companies of all sizes and maturity levels.
Chinese design in tech principles and practices are leading the world, but are often overlooked.
Design tool companies and design community platforms occupy new positions of value for tech.
Voice- and chat-based interfaces are grounded in mental models that don't require a visual representation.
Design
in Tech
Report
2017
Observations
https://designintechreport.wordpress.com
5. 1 Computational
Design 32
5
Sections Overview
What is “Computational Design” and
why does it matter to business + tech?
DESIGN → DE$IGN
What’s happening in startups and in M&A?
Design Needs
Designers
How does one hire this kind of talent?
Design Is By
Nature, Inclusive
Why does inclusion go together with design?
4
Shaping
Voice
What is the business value of “Inclusive Design”?
@pearlchen
6. 6@johnmaeda
DESIGN: “CLASSICAL DESIGN” BUSINESS: “DESIGN THINKING” TECHNOLOGY:“COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN”
There’s a right way to make
what is perfect, crafted,
and complete
The last report reviewed
the difference between
Classical and Computational
Design. This was somewhat
controversial, but we review
it here again.
Review:
There are Three Types
of Design
Designing for billions of
individual people and in realtime,
is at scale and TBD
Because execution has
outpaced innovation, and
experience matters
Driver/ the Industrial Revolution,
and prior to that at least a few
millennia of ferment.
Driver/ the impact of Moore’s
Law, mobile computing, and the
latest tech paradigms.
Driver/ the need to innovate in
relation to individual customer
needs requires empathy.
Section 1: Computational Design
7. 7@johnmaeda @sunilmaholtra
Both the 2015 and 2016 Design in Tech Report pointed to the emergence of “design thinking” as
entering the conscious of big business — heralded by the covers of both Harvard Business Review and
Bloomberg Businessweek featuring design. “Design Thinking” is different from “Classical Design” in
both how it is practiced and the final outcome: the latter results in an artifact to hold in one’s hands,
whereas the former results in consensus between multiple stakeholders.
Overlapping example of these two
kinds of design: A design consultancy
like IDEO, Frog, or a B-school program
like Yale SOM, or a classic consultancy
like McKinsey, Accenture, BCG.
CLASSICAL DESIGN DESIGN THINKING
Emphasis On Practice Strategy
Raw Materials Paper, Wood, Metal, and Anything Physical
Post-Its, Whiteboards, and Team Members’
Time
Goal Orientation Ship a Perfect Product/Object Foster Constructive Divergence
Impact is Evaluated By Acceptance, Adoption, and Awards
A Specific Product or Feature That
Resulted
Involves Primarily Classical Designers Business Thinkers/Doers
Skills With Tools Are Generally
Grounded In
Hands and Laws of Physics Mind and Organizational Sciences
Review:
Classical Design vs
Design Thinking
Section 1: Computational Design
8. 8@johnmaeda
When people in the tech industry talk about “design,” they often make the mistake of not differentiating
between classical designers and computational designers. The former kind of designer might craft a
wooden chair for a home which is used by a few people; the latter kind of designer might craft an app
for a smartphone which is used by hundreds of millions of people.
CLASSICAL DESIGN COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN
Number of Active Users Few to Millions Few to Billions
Time Needed to Deploy
Completed Product
Weeks to Months through Distribution
Channels
Instantaneously Delivered
Over the Net
“Perfection” is Achievable Yes There’s a final state. No It’s always evolving.
Designer’s Level of Confidence Absolute, and Self-Validating
Generally High, but Open to Analyzing
Testing/Research
Production Materials Paper, Wood, Metal, and Anything Physical
Data, Models, Algorithms, and Anything
Virtual
Skills With Tools Are Generally
Grounded In
Hands and Laws of Physics Mind and Computer + Social Sciences
Overlapping example of these
two kinds of design: A smartphone,
laptop, robot, and any human-facing
IoT device.
Review:
Classical Design vs
Computational Design
Section 1: Computational Design
9. 9@REAS @codepen @RCA @medialab @apple @ITP_NYU
MURIEL COOPER
MIT Media Lab
Visible Language
Workshop
GILLIAN CRAMPTON-SMITH
Royal College of Art
Computer-Related Design
and Ivrea Institute
JOY MOUNTFORD
Apple Human
Interface Group,
Interval, Yahoo!,
Akamai
The 2016 Design in Tech
Report highlighted four key
pioneers of computational
design — all leaders who
brought Classical Design
into the domain of Computer
Science with a uniquely
humanistic approach (in
contrast to a purely technical
approach, which was
dominant at the time).
Review:
The Origins of
Computational
Design
Pioneers of
Computational Design
Section 1: Computational Design
Processing [2001]
Codepen [2014]
Design By Numbers [1999]
BEN FRY, CASEY REAS, AND DANIEL SHIFFMAN
ALEX VAZQUEZ, TIM SABAT, AND CHRIS COYIER
JOHN MAEDA
DrawBot (DesignRobots) [2003]
JUST VAN ROSSUM, ERIK VAN BLOKLAND,
AND FREDERIK BERLAEN
TODAY
1999
RED BURNS
NYU Tisch School
Interactive
Telecommunication
Program
10. 10@NEA @daynagrayson @automattic @photomatt
Designers are involved in code development
2/5
“I can read fluently, but I
can't write fluently.”
MASTERBEGINNER
NEA Future of Design Survey 2016
SOURCE
In Practice:
Design is Blending with
Engineering Talent
In the 2016 Design in Tech Report we shared how 1/3 of the design leaders we surveyed
had formal engineering/science training. It said to me that a considerable amount of “hybrid”
talent is out there in the professional world, that wasn’t the case a few decades ago.
Last month I surveyed a group of designers and devs at Automattic (note the double-T) with
regards to their Javascript expertise. In the graph below you can see two “humps” — to the
right is the developers, but to the left is the designers.
1/3
Designers surveyed had formal engineering/science training
Since 2015, WordPress developers
have been encouraged to master
Javascript from WP’s native PHP.
*
Section 1: Computational Design
11. @medialab @nnegroponte
“
Where do new ideas
come from? The answer
is simple: differences.
Creativity comes from
unlikely juxtapositions.
NICHOLAS NEGROPONTE
Professor and Co-Founder, MIT Media Laboratory
12. @khoslaventures @ireneau
“
DE$IGN
By the
Numbers IRENE AU
Design Partner, Khosla Ventures
If the design partner role
is to help startups realize
the full potential value of
design, the return on
investment is the ultimate
barometer of success in
venture capital.
13. 13@justinsayarath @tberno
2004 - 2012
COMPANY ACQUIRED BY COMPANY ACQUIRED BY COMPANY ACQUIRED BYCOMPANY ACQUIRED BY
2004 Frog Design
2007 Doblin
2009 Bigstock
2010 TAT
2011 Sofa
2011 Typekit
2011 Method
2011 Helicopter
2012 Maaike
2012 Bolt Peters
2012 80/20
2012 Cuban Council
2012 Behance
2013 Hot Studio
2013 Fjord
2013 Jet Cooper
2013 Banyan Ranch
2013 Hook & Loop
2013 17FEET
2013 Hattery
2013 Mixel
2014 Carbon Design
2014 Gecko Design
2014 Adaptive Path
2014 Reactive
2014 Flow Interactive
2014 Optimal Experience
KPMG
BCG
Flipboard
Adobe
2013 - 2014 2015
Teehan+Lax
Spring Studio
Lunar Design
Monsoon
DesignIt
Seren
Mobiento
Lapka
Catalyst
Akta
Chaotic Moon
PacificLink
Farm Design
Tactel
Fotolia
Facebook
BBVA
McKinsey
Capital One
Wipro
Ernst & Young
Deloitte
Airbnb
Cooper *consolidation
Salesforce
Accenture
Accenture
Flex
Panasonic Avionics
Adobe
Design M&A Activity
Software tool companies and creative communities.
Section 2: Design → De$ign
Over 70 design agencies have been acquired since 2004. >50% of which have been acquired since 2015
Flextronics
Monitor
Shutterstock
Rim
Facebook
Adobe
Globallogic
One Kings Lane
Google
Facebook
Square
Google
Adobe
Facebook
Accenture
Shopify
Deloitte
Infor
Google
Google
Etsy
Oculus/Facebook
Google
Capital One
Accenture
Deloitte
PWC
2014 Cynergy Systems
2014 S&C
2014 Ultravisual
2014 Aviary
https://designintechreport.wordpress.com
14. 14@justinsayarath @tberno
2017
AGENCY ACQUIRED BY
Capgemini
Salesforce
Salesforce
Tiny
Wix
Idean
Unity&Variety
Sequence
Dribbble
DeviantArt
Design Partners were elected in the last year at
McKinsey & Co [ 5 Total Design Partners ].
Four
Design M&A Activity continued
Pivotal
IBM
IBM
IBM
Kyu Collective *minority
Capgemini
Deloitte
Salesforce
New York Times
Accenture
Slice of Lime
Resource/Ammirati
ecx.io
Aperto
IDEO
Fahrenheit 212
Heat
Gravitytank
Fake Love
Karmarama
McKinsey
Nagarro
Deloitte
Shopify
Shopify
McKinsey
InVision
InVision
InVision
InVision
InVision
Carbon12
Mokriya
Uselab
Tiny Hearts
Boltmade
VeryDay
Waybury
Napkin
Silver Flows
Macaw
Muzli
2016 [PART ONE]
COMPANY ACQUIRED BY COMPANY ACQUIRED BY
2016 [PART TWO]
Software tool companies and creative communities.
IBM Distinguished Designers are corporate-
appointed for the first time.
Three
https://designintechreport.wordpress.com
15. When ex-Apple designer and startup founder/
CEO, Mark Kawano, was asked if he was glad
that he launched Storehouse even though it
closed in 2016, he responded unhesitatingly:
“Absolutely.”
15@asanwal
Takeaway: No Market Needed
Ran Out of Cash
Not the Right Team
Got Outcompeted
Pricing/Cost Issues
Poor Product
Need/Lack Business Model
Poor Marketing
Ignore Customers
Products Mis-Timed
Lose Focus
Disharmony on Team/Investors
Pivot Gone Bad
Lack Passion
Bad Location
No Financing/Investor Interest
Legal Challenges
Don't Use Network/Advisors
Burn Out
Failure to Pivot
Top 20 Reasons Startups Fail
CB Insights / Anand Sarwal
42%
29%
23%
19%
18%
17%
17%
14%
13%
13%
13%
10%
9%
9%
8%
8%
8%
8%
7%
14%
The overwhelming majority of startups fail to make it
out of their seed funding phase. And no founder
claims that it is an easy path to success in the startup
world. It is a tough, complicated journey to undertake
as an entrepreneur which pays immense tolls on the
individual and their families and friends. But they don’t
let failure ruin their optimism.
Section 2: Design → De$ign
Startups Embody
“Productive” Failure
16. 16@asanwal @johnmaeda
Fund$
The “Designification” of
Venture Capital
Last year’s Design in Tech Report predicted that there
would be more funds started by designers in the
future. And with the launch of two new funds — one
co-founded by designer Garry Tan and another to soon
be announced — it appears that it’s already beginning.
500 Startups
Bloomberg Beta
Collaborative Fund
Cowboy Ventures
Designer Fund
Homebrew
Kapor Capital
KPCB Edge
Rivet Ventures
Slow Ventures
Y Combinator
Initialized Capital / October 2016
Alexis Ohanian and Garry Tan
We’re founders who are engineers, designers, and product people.”
Backstage Capital / March 2016
Arlan Hamilton
Hamilton is one of the first LGBT black women to start a venture capital fund.”
Early-Stage Funds that are Design
and/or Inclusion Oriented**
NEW
NEW
have (or had) a designer on their team,
or have a stated inclusion focus.
Accel Partners
Bessemer Venture Partners
Google Ventures
Greylock Partners
Khosla Ventures
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
New Enterprise Associates
Sequoia Capital
True Ventures
**
Later-Stage Funds that are Design
and/or Inclusion Oriented**
“
“
Section 2: Design → De$ign
17. 17@NEA @daynagrayson @invision
Hiring Targets over next 12 Months [Startups]
Design-Centric Design-Committed Design-Mature Design-Unicorns
Current Number of Designers on Staff [Startups]
1-5
1-5
11-20
50+
+ 1-2 + 3-5 + 5-10 + 10 OR MORE
According to LinkedIn the highest echelon of the
technology industry is vying for more design talent
- Facebook, Google, and Amazon have collectively
grown art and design headcount by 65% in the past
year - with much headroom to hire more.
Design-Centric: Design was “important” or “very important” to their business. Committed: Have a designer as a co-founder
Mature: Have more than $20m in funding and at least 20 designers on staff. Unicorn: Design-centric + Have a valuation in excess of $1B.
+65% Y/Y
Trend: Designers Remain in High Demand
NEA Future of Design Survey 2016
SOURCE
Section 2: Design → De$ign
18. 18@kpcb @stanfordbiz @INSEAD @MITSloan @DardenMBA @HarvardHBS @BerkeleyHaas @yaleSOM @
Trend:
Design Thinking
Proliferating Into
Business Schools
Top business schools have student-led design
clubs, which are pushing the curriculum in
b-schools to shift as well.
“The fundamental profile of designers is beginning
to shift as traditional markets begin to value design
as a strategic lever.”
100%
STANFORD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Design Thinking Bootcamp: From Insights
to Innovation
INSEAD
Innovation by Design Programme
UC BERKLEY HASS
Design Thinking for Business Innovation
UVA DARDEN
Specialization in Design Thinking
and Innovation
MIT SLOAN
Product Design and Development
YALE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Design and Management
HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
i-Lab Design Thinking & Innovative
Problem Solving
Designers Jessica Helfand and Michael Bierut
join the faculty of Yale SOM / July 2016
Section 2: Design → De$ign
VIA KPCB VENTURED
19. 19
FRAMER
2014
@Khoi @goabstract @jbrewer @figmadesign @zoink @johnmaeda
Trend:
There’s No Clear Winner Yet For
Tools In Computational Design
“It’s the Wild West for managing the files that designers
generate. Dropbox is the clear winner, though GitHub does
surprisingly well. Overall, it’s clear that not a single design-
specific solution has taken hold here.“
What is your primary tool for
interface design? (2015)
1. Sketch
2. Photoshop
3. HTML/CSS
What tools do you use for project
management? (2015)
1 Other
2 Slack
3 Trello
A New Generation of Computational Design Tools are Emerging
What is your primary tool for
prototyping? (2015)
1 HTML/CSS
2 Invision
3 Other
2015 Designer Tools Survey
SOURCE FIGMA
2015
XD
2015
What tools do you use for version
control and file management?(2015)
1 Dropbox
2 Github
3 Google Drive
ABSTRACT
2016
Section 2: Design → De$ign
INVISION
2011
SKETCH
2008
KHOI VINH
20. 20@johnmaeda @bigstock @behance @dribbble @deviantart
Creative community acquisitions
in the last five years. There’s
likely going to be more.
It’s important to remember that creative
communities are generally “not for sale” in a
traditional way. Membership is primarily
voluntary, and it is in the pursuit of a
common good as the primary driving factor.
Five
Trend:
Creative Communities
Are A Secret Ingredient
Acquired: 2009
Shutterstock
Acquired: 2012
Adobe
Acquired: 2015
Adobe
Acquired: 2017
Wix
Acquired: 2017
Tiny
Acquired: 2016
Invision
Bigstock Behance Fotolia
DribbbleDeviant ArtMuzli
Section 2: Design → De$ign
21. Trend: Designers Are Hungry For Capital
21@jshoee @johnmaeda @juleserhardt @sunilmaholtra
Of designers surveyed would start a
company if they had access to venture
capital / other funding, in ranked order:
80%
1. Product Studio
2. Consumer Startup
3. Enterprise Startup
“The Digital Product Studio blends three components:
Consultancy, Venture & Own Product. Each feeds and informs the
other in a powerful virtuous circle of network, experience, funding,
brand, craft, and talent.”
2016
State of the
Digital Nation
20%
Are happy to NOT be funded.
Section 2: Design → De$ign
JULES ERHARDT, IN 2016 STATE OF THE DIGITAL NATION
22. 22Haibo Lei / Co-founder+CEO at Taihuoniao, Ling Fan / Founder+CEO of Tezign, Professor Min Wang / CAFA
China
China Is A Major Force
in Designer Co-Founded
Companies
Meitu Xiuxiu
A selfie photo editor
app and platform
Youzan
An e-commerce application
in WeChat app store
Taihuonao
A design-driven innovative
community and incubator
zcool
Design community and
imagery resource sharing
Xiachufang
A community to share
cooking recipes
Tezign
A platform based design
and creative talent solution
Alibaba
Two of the eighteen co-
founders are designers
Xiaomi
Two of the eight co-
founders are designers
Four of the seven co-founders
are designers
Visual China
Designers in China with 0.5 million
design graduates every year.
17 M
Three Designer Co-Founded Chinese Companies Have
A Combined Market Cap Of Over $300B
Designer Co-Founded and Venture-Backed Startups
Emerging In China
Mogujie
An online fashion e-commerce
platform and community
Innomake
Design-driven smart
transportation project
Section 2: Design → De$ign
23. 23Haibo Lei / Co-founder+CEO at Taihuoniao, Ling Fan / Founder+CEO of Tezign, Professor Min Wang / CAFA
China
Four Trends From
A Designer CEO’s
Viewpoint
WeChat embeds QR code reader as the most
frictionless means for offline interaction. Offline
interactions let you easily LATER scan QR code
for payment, visiting a site, adding a friend, etc.
QR Codes
In the spring festival just passed, 1 billion Chinese
mobile users scan the Chinese character "福
(good fortune)" that appears in offline scenes
to collect "福" in Alipay.
FU × AR
WeChat lets people leave up to 60 second voice
messages. People are holding the speak button on
WeChat and speak to the cell phone everywhere.
It’s leading to micro classes, and micro Q&A apps.
Voice
Hub-less bicycle sharing has become app-
enabled so you can pick up a bicycle anywhere.
the app unlocks the bike with its built-in chip,
solid tires, and is chain-less.
Transportation
“… software makers in China are far from being mere hawkers of pale, tasteless
knockoffs forced onto the unsuspecting public living behind the Firewall.”
福
Section 2: Design → De$ign
DAN GROVER, IN MORE CHINESE MOBILE UI TRENDS
24. Text
-KLAUS SCHWAB
Founder of the World Economic Forum
Capital is being superseded by
creativity and the ability to
innovate — and therefore by
human talents — as the most
important factors of
production. If talent is
becoming the decisive
competitive factor, we can be
confident that capitalism is
being replaced by ‘talentism’…
“
Design
Needs
Designers
25. Trend: The Future Of Design Is Digital
25@AIGA @GoogleText
In 2016, the largest US-based national
designer association AIGA issued a study
in collaboration with Google to reveal a
sentiment shift for its future towards
digital and interactive forms of design.
LEAST SATISFIED DESIGNERS MOST SATISFIED DESIGNERS
Publishing (74%), Print Design (74%),
Architecture (71%)
Industrial/Product Design (83%), Brand Strategy (82%),
Digital Design (82%)
Top 10 words to describe the Future of Design
Size is proportional to popularity
AIGA x Google Design Census 2016
SOURCE
Section 3: Design needs Designers
Digital
Interactive
Simple
ExcitingInnovative
Human
Experience
Clean
Inclusive
Design
605
300
231
26. 26@FastCoDesign
of students surveyed say they learned
their digital skills from resources outside
their coursework.
86%
Accelerated
Learning:
Free Options
Inexpensive Options
Tuition Options
Teaching Yourself Online
The average program in design’s primary area of expertise lies in
Classical Design instead of Computational Design. Furthermore,
their traditional emphasis is on individual creation (versus
teamwork), intuition-driven work (versus testing), and eschewing
business thinking (as equivalent to “selling out”).
Section 3: Design needs Designers
27. 27@nicoleslaw @susanstuart @fatimahkabba @jennvano
More than
Design:
Code is not the only
unicorn skill
“We talk about the power of words — both content and style — all the time. When it
comes to friendships, romance, work dynamics, and, dare we even mention it — though
nothing is more telling, more relevant — politics, words have the power to change our
opinions, incite action, divide or unify us, move us. Words can shape reality.”
JENNIFER VAN
Verbal Design
Words as Material
“I think of design as a process of articulation. We join together to express an idea in
a coherent form. We bring ideas to life. We connect the dots or build bridges for our
users. That often means being specific about what a product does, who it’s for, why
it matters, and how it works. We have to trek through a pile of ambiguity to do this.”
NICOLE FENTON
Why UX Design is a Lot Like Writing
“Here’s where I’d like to draw the parallel with writing — because a core skill of the
interaction designer is imagining users (characters), motivations, actions,
reactions, obstacles, successes, and a complete set of “what if” scenarios.”
SUSAN STUART
Design Schools that include Writing
degrees or offer Writing and Content
Strategy focused coursework
Programs
1. School of Visual Arts IXD MFA
2. Otis College of Art and Design MFA
3. Ringling College of Art and Design BFA
4. Savannah College of Art and Design BFA/MFA
Section 3: Design needs Designers
28. 28
Communicating/articulating your design
Using empathy to design
Rationalizing/defending your design
Using research and analytics to design
Leadership and teamwork
Understanding business and finance
@rochelleking Elizabeth Churchill, Caitlin Tan @kpcb @sunilmaholtra
Designing with Data
ROCHELLE KING
The top 3 skills needed by designers in
practice are not available to them as basic
coursework in education as a designer.
The Design
Education Gap:
Acquiring Data, Business,
and Leadership skills beyond
the classroom
Understanding business and finance
Using research and analytics to design
Leadership and teamwork
Communicating/articulating your design
Using empathy to design
Rationalizing/defending your design
Desired design education biases
Business and finance skills are desired the most
by graduates, + research and analytics skills too.
Existing design education biases
Section 3: Design needs Designers
29. 29@jshoee
Orgs:
There’s No Single,
Perfect, Design
Organizational Structure
— Experience Designer
— Senior Experience Designer
— Manager, Experience Design
— Director, Experience Design
— Experience Researcher
— Senior Experience Researcher
— Manager, Experience Research
— Director, Experience Research
— Content Experience Designer
— Content Strategist
— Junior/Associate Designer
— Designer
— Senior Designer
— Lead Designer
— Principal Designer
— Design Fellow
— Product Designer
— Senior Product Designer
— Product Design Manager
— Product Design Director
— User Experience Researcher
— User Experience Research Manager
— User Experience Research Director
— User Experience Strategist
— Copywriter
— Product Copywriter
of designers surveyed say that their
highest ranked design leader reports
to the CEO. 2nd highest (at 31%) is
VP/Head of Product.
46%
COMPANY A COMPANY B COMPANY C
Section 3: Design needs Designers
Design Leader Design Leader Design Leader
— Creative Director
— Senior Creative Director
— Art Director
— Senior Art Director
— Illustration Director
— Brand Designer
Types of
positions
and levels Types of
functions
spanned
Simple Research + Content Research + Content
+ Marketing
31. 31@jshoee Section 3: Design needs Designers
More challenging work
Looking for a change
Opportunity for new role
Concerned about lack of career growth
Didn't have good/experienced manager
Leadership team didn't understand value of design
Other
Wasn't satisfied with comp
0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2
Average Tenure
Agency = 4 years
In-House = 2.4 years
Independent Contractors = 3.8 years
Impact and lacking challenging work is the #1 factor for designers switching jobs
Orgs:
From Annual
Design In Tech Report
Sentiment Survey
Of agencies have a single holistic design
team that includes designers who focus on
brand/comms/marketing.
Of companies have a single holistic design
team. The other half splits designers across
marketing and product.
70%
50%
33. 33@justinsayarath @automattic @designerdepot
2006
Social media
= blogging
27% of the internet is powered by WordPress
1999
2017
Blogs
23
Blogs
50M
Blogs Brought New Voices To The Web
Weekly Usage by Percentage
70% 32% 30% 25% 25% 18% 17%
Section 4: Shaping Voice
The democratization of influence
34. 34@caniuse @benedictevans @nielsen
Design is:
Less Open These Days
Smart phone apps are owned by
Google or Facebook, and when
mobile devices are used there is
20% chance the person is
engaging the Facebook app.
8 of 10
“The open architecture of the web led to an incredible era of
experimentation. Many startups were controversial when they
were first founded. What if AOL or some other central gatekeeper
had controlled the web, and developers had to ask permission to
create Google, YouTube, eBay, Paypal, Wikipedia, Twitter, Facebook,
etc. Sadly, this is where we’re headed on mobile.”
CHRIS DIXON
“The Decline of the Mobile Web”
Section 4: Shaping Voice
35. 35@kpcb @a16z @benedictevans @shoobe01 @caniuse
Design is:
Attention to Detail, but
Context is Everything
Design is concerned with all the details that
make an experience something that is spectacular
and memorable. That said, these days it isn’t an
easy task to achieve given how devices can vary
and how browsers can interpret code in a variety
of unpredictable ways. But the greater context in
which these experiences come to be need to
be considered.
Using caniuse.com to see if a particular CSS descriptor works across browsers.
Variability in Browsers
How and whether people hold different device types, by Steven Hoober
Variability in Devices
11 14 51
15 52
53
54
56
57
58
59
10
10.1
TP
43
44
45
10.2 ALL 53 56
55 9.3 4.4.4
IE Edge Firefox Chrome Safari Opera
iOS
Safari
Opera
Mini
Android
Browser
Chrome
Android
Section 4: Shaping Voice
36. 36@behance @milothemes
2017 Design Trends Guide
SOURCE
Often in how design is talked about with
regards to the screen, the topic of “how it looks”
dominates the main discussion. However, the
one design trend with the most significance
today for web content creators is an invisible
one: Will my page get found? Which means
designing for the non-human viewer, too.
Designers are not only optimizing for user experience, but
are simultaneously optimizing for non-human experience.
Design Trends Authors: Loredana Papp-Dinea | Co-Author: Mihai Baldean
4Animations
5
Geometric Shapes 6
Courageous Colors 7
Innovative Scrolling and Parallax 8
Color Transitions 9
Mobile Browsing 10
Landing Pages
1
2Cinemagraphs
3More 3D
14
Split Content 15
Full-Screen Forms 16
Videos Everywhere 17
SEO is Important 18
Hidden Navigation 19
20Tiny Design Details
10
Creative use of neutral space and Grid 11
Storytelling 12
Lazy Loading
Semi-Flat Design Custom Graphics and Illustrations
Design Is Not Just For Our Five Senses
Section 4: Shaping Voice
37. 37@facebook @statista @producthunt
Design is:
Now A Lot of Talk
Chat-based interfaces are
grounded in mental models that
don't require a complex
graphical representation and
navigation system.
Chat Services listed on
394
Section 4: Shaping Voice
Facebook Messenger Users
1B
WeChat Users
846M
Conversational interfaces are grounded in the original CLI
(Command Line Interfaces) and are a bit retro, but effective.
38. Put That There
for DARPA
Design Is The Computer, Attentive To You
38@benedictevans @a16z @jakobnielsen @ibm @cnn @adobe @nngroup
Prior to 2012, the average error rate for image recognition was 28%
and for speech recognition it was 26%. After ML, the average error rate
for image recognition became 7% and for speech reco 4%.
JAKOB NIELSEN [2003]
The Arrival of Machine
Learning
A news anchor accidentally
ordered items for viewers with the
device. —via CNN (2016)
IBM Watson wins
Jeopardy (2013)
Ellen talks with Siri
(2012)
Adobe exploring what digital
photo editing via voice. —via
YouTube (2017)
“Voice will not replace
the screen”
CHRIS SCHMANDT [1981] BENEDICT EVANS [2012]
Amazon Echo’s sold
5.3M
AMAZON.COM [2016]
Section 4: Shaping Voice
39. The cost for protection against a
sophisticated DDoS attack. For
an individual journalist, it’s a
prohibitive one that threatens
the future of the Open Web.
39@ameellio @briankrebs
Help
Wanted:
Designers In Security
Today's connected technology products and services make us more vulnerable than ever before - it's incumbent upon
designers to build product features and UX that call out and protect against those vulnerabilities for end users. Bottom line —
you don't need to be a cyber expert to be a designer in security. Learn more about non-profit organization Simply Secure.
“Privacy and security matter, and if you care about any part of the
Internet then you need to care about security, because there are so
many risks — including IoT related risks these days. Designers are
needed to make the complex challenges of security actionable and
understandable. It's a great opportunity for design leadership:
complex problems with multiple stakeholders and an urgent need for
human-centered thinking.”
AME ELLIOTT
Design Director of Simply Secure
$150K—200K/yr
Section 4: Shaping Voice
40. @microsoftdesign
KAT HOLMES, IN DESIGN.BLOG
Principal Design Director, Inclusive
Design at Microsoft
By recognizing exclusion we
can start to build empathy
for people who interact with
unwelcoming designs every
day of their lives.
“Design Is
By Nature
Inclusive
41. 41@jshoee @alistairmbarr @theeconomist @daveyalba @kashhill @alexjamesfitz
Historically speaking, technology
products weren’t designed with
inclusivity in mind because the users
of the products were generally the
makers of the products. The number
of people using computers used to
be very small. However today, due
to smart phone proliferation,
everyone is now using computers.
To design for everyone, we need to
now think and work more inclusively
than ever before.
A Shift:
Moving towards
inclusivity
ALISTAIR BARR
The Wall Street Journal
Google Mistakenly Tags Black
People As “Gorillas” Showing
Limits Of Algorithms.
July 2015 June 2016
More Airbnb Customers Are
Complaining About Racism.
Aug 2016
Clearly Snapchat Doesn’t Get
What’s Wrong With Yellowface.
How Nextdoor reduced racist
posts by 75%
Aug 2016
Airbnb CEO: “Bias and
Discrimination Have No
Place” Here.
Sep 2016
Companies trending upwards
in design perception:
Survey
A.W.
The Economist
DAVEY ALBA
Wired
1. Airbnb
2. Google
3. Slack
4. Microsoft
KASHMIR HILL
Fusion ALEX FITZPATRICK
Time
Section 5: Design is by Nature, Inclusive
42. A Tool: Microsoft Inclusive Design Toolkit
42@microsoftdesign @ibmdesign @philgilbertsr
Alone
Instructions Simulations
1. Write the sequence of steps a user will
take in your solution.
2. From the Temporary/Situational Limit
support card, choose one limitation.
3. Recreate this limitation for yourself.
4. Go through the sequence of steps you
wrote in #1.
5. Note what could be improved.
6. Adjust your design.
7. Repeat with other limitations from
the Temporary/Situational Limit
support card.
Purpose Simulations
To reveal opportunities for improving your solution
by simulating temporary and situational limitations.
Iterate | Simulations
Materials Simulations
Temporary/Situational Limit support card
A prototype (low to high fidelity).
Tips Simulations
Build your solution by creating low to
medium fidelity prototypes. Examine
and define what you want the interactive
experience to be holistically and from a
micro-view.
Iteration takes into consideration the full
Persona Spectrum and what’s appropriate
physically, contextually, environmentally,
and socially for the person(s) involved.
Instructions Mismatch to Solution II
1. From the list you generated in Mismatch
to Solution I, pick the three you’re most
interested in.
2. As individuals, use the first idea and
brainstorm for 3-5 minutes to generate
a list of possible solutions. Write the
solutions on sticky notes. One idea
per note.
3. Repeat step #2 with your next
two choices.
4. If you’re in a group, share your ideas and
group them in clusters of like ideas. Or
filter the ideas according to what you’d
like to work on as a team.
Purpose Mismatch to Solution II
To generate design concepts based on inspiration
from mismatched interactions.
Ideate | Mismatch to Solution II
Materials Mismatch to Solution II
Examples of Mismatch support card
Sticky notes, pens
Tips Mismatch to Solution II
Place emphasis on generating a volume of
ideas before clustering and filtering.
Start the activity with a one-minute ice
breaker that illustrates how much can be
accomplished in a one-minute brainstorm
session. Give participants a word like
“jump” and ask them to write down their
associations with the word.
Instructions Persona Network
1. With a particular person in mind, make
note of who they interact with every day.
Who do they rely on? Trust? Enjoy?
2. Draw a map of the person and their key
interactions with 3-5 people. Include
the different types of interactions that
typically take place, such as making plans
for dinner or going to work.
3. List the mismatches between the person
and their environment.
Purpose Persona Network
To consider design challenges in terms of someone’s
personal ecosystem.
Frame | Persona Network
Materials Persona Network
The social context support card
Note taking supplies
Tips Persona Network
There’s no one “right” way to map the
network. Do what makes sense for your
creative process.
Do this activity after learning about the
challenges, enablement, successes, and
motivations of a person(s) with a
permanent disability.
With coworkers In a crowd
Downloads of the Microsoft's inclusive toolkit since September of 2015,
with 23% of those downloads occurring since the start of the year. The
toolkit consists of the manual, activities, and videos that have been used
to facilitate a range of workshops on inclusive design in South America,
Asia, Europe, and all over the United States.
15,000+
Section 5: Design is by Nature, Inclusive
IBM’s Accessibility Handbook has had > 50K views and 10K paper copies distributed to date.
43. Inclusive Design is Good Business
43@microsoftdesign @johnmaeda @jshoee
As products and services in our lives become
more personalized, there is a growing need for
the teams that build products to look and feel like
the users on the other side. Recruiting and
retaining diverse teams is essential for inclusive
design — it's more important than ever before.
2016 DESIGN IN TECH REPORT
The Conversation
“Biggest issue is diversity
outside of the design team.
Design team is not the problem.”
“It's very diverse already
and we're pushing design
into completely uncharted
areas in terms of geography
and industry.”
“We're already very diverse.
When diversity becomes
part of the culture you don't
have to manufacture it.”
We ideally should be talking about it more internally.
We are actively working towards this goal and have put metrics in place.
We try but have more pressing priorities.
We talk about it but not much action.
We’re actively working towards this goal, but are resistant to put metrics behind it.
90%
Of designers surveyed answered YES.
8% were INDIFFERENT. 2% were NO.
“We haven't talked about
this and there are more
pressing priorities.”
Is having a more diverse design
team important to you, personally?
Section 5: Design is by Nature, Inclusive
44. @kpcb
MARY MEEKER
Internet Trends Report Founder and KPCB Partner
“
One of the things I have learned
about effective decision making is
that the best decisions are often
made by diverse groups of people.
Saying or hearing these words is
magic: That’s really interesting, I had
never thought of it that way before.
Thank you.
45. Aaron Irizarry, Nick, Abhishek Jayaprakash, Anderson Bordim, Adam, Adam Leon, Adam Williams, Adam Cricchio, Alberta Soranzo, Albert Kim, Alex Moffit, Alexandra Fiorillo, Alex Rothera, Alexander Ryan, Alexis Lucio, Alfred, Algert Sula,
Ali Ndlovu, Ame Elliott, Amelia Abreu, Ana N., Andric, Andy Wright, Andy Van Solkema, Andy Vitale, Angela W, Angel Ceballos, Angelos Arnis, Anirudh B Balotiaa, Ann, Anne Mieke, Anthony Miles, APB, Jonathan Arena, Arnaud Carrette,
Ashley, Ashok, Abhijit Thosar, Ayelet Segal, Bill Bernahl, Ben Wolstenholme, Bernardo, Laurence Berry, Beth Berrean, Emanuele Bianchi, Blake Brown, Bob van Luijt, Nathaniel Bolton, Brady, Bruno Pedro, Brad Baer, Brady, Brandon Kirk, Nick,
Brian, Bruce Nussbaum, Bryan Sattler, Ben Stanfield, Brian Tran, Brent Turner, Julius Santiago, Burhanudeen, Calvin Robertson, Camilla Dahle, Camilo, Carina Ngai, Carla Rocha Morais, Carlos Alonso Pascual, Carlos, Christine Armstrong,
Christine Donahue, Chacko Poothicote, Arnab Chakravarty, Leslie Bayona, Chris Messina, Chris Henderson, Christian Talmage, Chrystia Chudczak, Ciara Peter, Clare, Claudio Lobos, Christopher McCann, Camilla, Gabriel, Colin Johnston,
Iulian, Prince Boucher, Chris Purcell, Cristian Mazzeo, Ben Lee, Connor Soltas, CR, David Linssen, Daniele Vitali, Daniel Harvey, Daniel, Daniel R Farrell, Daniela Nuñez, Dario Alberto Henke, Darren Jonathan Mc Nelis, Dave Poore, Dave, David
Alegria, David Meyers, David de Céspedes, Dave Fisher, Dawn Danby, Dee Sadler, Dennis Eusebio, Emily, Devesh Yadav, Dezzie, Dirk, Daniel Schwartz, David Miyabe, Deanna, Dom Crockett, Dorelle Rabinowitz, Doug Morwood, Douglas Smith,
Doug Tomczik, Duane King, Ducnan Robertson, David Witt, Dylan Evans, Eric A. Ambata, Erik Ibarra, Elizabeth Galbut, Hitoshi Enjoji, Emrose, Erick, Eric, Erik Loehfelm, Erik Levitch, Erik Lack, Erin Pangilinan, Esther, Ethan Miller, Evelyn Kim,
Francesco Milanesio, Fabio, Faisal Ahmad, Aulia Fajri, Faz, Fred Beecher, Felipe Pires, Filipe Roque, Frank, W, Frances Yllana, Fredy D. Oré, Gabriel Brettas, Gareth Kay, Timothy, Gaurang, Gema, Gene, Geoffrey Brown, Georgette, Glen Barry,
Kai Go, Chad Goldberg, Greg, Greg Brown, Abraham Gonzalez, Raphael Grignani, Guna, Hartmut Esslinger, Hammans, Hannah Chung, Dan Harrelson, Super Swank, Heidi Braunstein, Timothy McKenna, Michelle Choi, BKLTD USA, Joel Arias,
Marvin Vista, Miyuki, Rui, Sanny, Hervé Mischler, Alexander, Jared Fanning, Horaci, Helmut Ramsauer, Heather, Hui, Mohammed Hussain, Iban Curdu, Ilaria, Indra Klavins, Ines, Christina Lauer, Jozeph Forakis, MusHo, Paola, Gabriele, Ingrid
Lange, Maria Ioveva, Indra Schlachter, Adam, Jason Greene, Jackie Jantos, Jade Kwan, Jadie Oh, James Touhey, James, James, Jan Schultink, Janaina, Janey Jones, Jannie Lai, Jason Pang, Jay Frankhouse, Jeanine Harriman, Jeffrey
Huang, Jeff, Jen Hong, Jeremy C, Jeremy LaCroix, Jeroen Frumau, Jessie Webster, Jevfandrew, Garrett Owens, Jim MacLeod, Jin Kang Moller, Jeff Ivany, Joe Johnston, John Manoogian III, Jonathan Shariat, João Pedro Rodrigues, Elstin
Joe, Joe Blair, Joel Brosjö, Joe Schram, Johan Wingard, John Maeda, John Roescher, John Cleere, John Labriola, Jon, Jonny McConnell, Jose Coronado, Josh Markowitz, Joshua Aronson, Jason Sack, Itth, J Wert, Julian, Julianna, Julien
Brehier, Julyanne Liang, Lee Jun Lin, Justin, Karel, Kai, Karen Chang, Kartik Poria, Kedron, Kevin Bethune, Kate Helber, Kian, Kieran Dowling, Konstantinos M, Kim Soerensen, Kleber, Kristy Tillman, Kurt Varner, Kyle, Kyle Bennett, Kyle Kelly,
len, John Lally, Lance Q, Larry Chen, Laura Martini, Jung Young Lee, Leonard Shek, Leonidas, Alexa Roman, Lingjing, Leslie Muller, Logan Hartline, Lorenza Ramírez, Loretta, Ludvik Herrera, Luis Madureira, Macy Nguyen, Gabriel Mac,
Brandon, Dan Baciu, James, Marco Klein, Tino Klähne, George Theo, Alejandro Marin, Marc Posch, Marc Anderson, Marc, Maria, Marilyn, Mario Delgado, Marion Gillet, Marlena, Mart Maasik, Marta Fernandez, Martin Willers, Martina Gobec,
Matt, Matt Murray, Matthew, Matti Parviainen, Mattias Wikman, Matt Kanaracus, Maureen Hanratty, M. Stanley, Maurizio, Ryan McLaughlin, Randy J Hunt, Ron Shaw, Mel Choyce, Meredith Schulz, Kevin Meyer, Matthew, Michael Jennings,
Michael Margolis, Michelle Kim, Mike Brooks, Mike Flynn, Mike Gottschalk, Milan Kocic, Ashley-ziyi, Liu, Leigh Anne Miller, Jennifer Milne, Mindy Park, Mitch, MJ, Michelle Knoernschild, Mike Kruzeniski, Matt MacLaurin, Michele, Matt,
Murat, Murilo Luciano, Andrew Fung, Emma, Niccolò Magnani, Nick, Noam Bernstein, Noelle Moseley, Anonymouse, Nelle Steele, Oswaldo Acosta, Okay Karadayılar, Olivia La Faire, Anggit Yuniar Pradito, Orkan Telhan, Ozlem, Paolo Lorini,
Paddy, Paolo Villacarlos, Patrick de Jong, Patrick Durgin-Bruce, Patrik Beskow, Paul Genberg, Paul Astudillo, Paulo, Paulpod, Peter Cho, Pete Kinser, Peter Thielen, Phil Gilbert, Pierre-Denis Autric, Pierre Montana, Patricia L. Raufer, Aaron
Poe, Colin Poindexter, Peter Sandberg, Philipa, Jay Fichialos, Rafael Jiménez, Rahul Dhide, Rasmus, Ray Besiga, P, Reem, Remy van der Geer, Renato Valdes, Maria Matveeva, Riccie, Rob Carson, Robert Suarez, Roberto, Roisin Markham,
Roland Sailer, Romeu Biscaia Machado, Rose Kue, Rosalind Roth, Lampros Roussos, Roland-Philippe Kretzschmar, Roya Ramezani, Reed Reibstein, Ryan Rumsey, Rasam, Russell Haines, Russell Ong, Ruymán Ferrera Martín, Ryan
Rosensweig, Saigesp, Saikat Dutta, Samantha Clark, Sami Niemelä, Sana Rao, Saneef Ansari, Santiago Camargo, Sarah W. Rose, Sarah Doody, Sarah Morris, Sarath, Satyam Kantamneni, Stuart Griffiths, Shannon Carter, Scott McManigal,
Scott Zimmer, Shane, Sean McLeary, Sebastián Rial, Schaudhry, Sergio, Xi Liu, Shankar, Shauna, Shawn Johnson, Shelby Jones, Steven Hoober, Shubham Gupta, Mervin Ng, Siddhant Shah, Siong, Naushad, Justin Maxwell, Song, Sean
Rooney, SS, Stacey, Stephen P. Anderson, Sudhindra V., Sundy Grubel, Sunil Malhotra, Surbhi Bindlish, Susana Branco, Suvonil Chatterjee, Suzanne Pellican, Sylvie, Sylvestre Lucia, Troels Nørlem, Tejas Bhalerao, Teo Choong Ching, Name,
Thomas, Tom Foster, Tim Salau, Tim, Timm, Timoni West, Taylor Kirk, Trevor Lord, Tobias Baharan Marjo, Thomas Pavlak, Tracey Varnell, Switzin Twikirize, Tündi Szász, Tyler Hilker, Tyler Townley, Mark Uraine, Vandy Meares, Jasper
Verplanken, Vincent, Vikram Rajagopalan, Vikram Sood, Vincent, Vivek Jain, Vytas, Wei, Wulf, Joseph Meersman, Christopher Lam, Wilbert Baan, Mable Wong, Will Copsey, Alexandra oliveira, Daniel Lin, Gainshin, Yazin Akkawi, Ng Yee Jie,
Todd ZakiWarfel, Zeiber, Zishan Ashraf, and 500+ others who chose not to be listed here.
Thank you to all of our contributors
Kristy Tillman, Randy Hunt, Maria Giudice, Tom Berno, Kate Carmody, Andrew Crow, Audrey Liu, Bob Baxley, Bobby Goodlatte, Catherine Courage, Craig
Villamor, Genevieve Conaty, Helena Price, Jackie Goldberg, Johanna Evans, Johnnie Manzari, Josh Brewer, Joshua Goldenberg, Kaaren Hanson, Malthe
Sigurdsson, Marcos Weskamp, Mark Kawano, Matt MacQueen, Megs Fulton, Mike Kruzeniski, Morgan Knutson, Paco Vinoly, Paul Stamatiou, Robert
Padbury, Ryan Donahue, Tom Suiter, Vanessa Cho, Wesley Yun
46. 46@designersaccord
What is Design? It’s about business. It’s
about people. It’s about technology. It’s now
about digital technology — which touches a
lot of people. And it’s now about a lot of
people unlike yourself since it is in the
millions of people. Because it involves so
many people today, design responsibly.
Valerie Casey invites you to start a Creative Power Day in your community
47. This presentation has been compiled for informational purposes only
and should not be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell
securities in any entity.
The presentation relies on data and insights from a wide range of
sources, including public and private companies, market research
firms, and industry professionals. We cite specific sources where data
are public; the presentation is also informed by non-public information
and insights.
This is the third publication of the Design In Tech report. We will post
any updates revisions or clarifications at
https://designintechreport.wordpress.com
Please report any errors to @johnmaeda on Twitter. Thank you!
John Maeda has minor equity positions as an investor in certain
companies referenced in the presentation maedastudio.com/startups.
Disclosure