Advertising agencies are obsessed with innovation. They also have one of the most unique sets of creative talent of any industry. Yet the creative department is the most suspicious of "innovation" of any group at the agency. Could it be that actually Creative Directors hold the keys to converting ad agencies into what so many desire: innovation partners to clients?
(special thanks to @seelydiaplay for presentation design help)
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.
This presentation explore the 3 key elements of Design Thinking concept:
1) mind-set
2) process and
3) tool
Thinking of design as an experience rather than isolated objects help us deal with much more complex world - Tim Brown
A way of approaching business problem in the same way designers approach design problem - Roger Martin
No longer associated simply with objects and appearances, design is increasingly understood in a much wider sense as the human capacity to plan and produce desired outcomes. - Bruce Mau
Design as a way of thinking, an approach to solving problems
Capturing Contexts: A workshop with jobs-to-be-done tools / Service Experienc...Martin Jordan
Customers hire services and products to do a certain job. Once people spot a job in their life they start looking for a solution, an offering that helps them to get the job done. Which offering they eventually hire often depends on the circumstances in which the job occurs.
This workshop highlighted the importance of customers’ situations and contexts when creating new offerings. As circumstances are changing, people’s related needs and desired outcomes do too. Using the example of food-related services, the workshop at Service Experience Camp 2015 illustrated how all offerings fulfil the general need of feeding humans, but also which specific situations each service caters for.
The workshop was run by Andrej Balaz, Hannes Jentsch and Martin Jordan on November 14, 2015 at Service Experience Camp in Kalkscheune in Berlin-Mitte.
Crossing the Chasm with Semantic TechnologyMarin Dimitrov
After more than a decade of active efforts towards establishing Semantic Web, Linked Data and related standards, the verdict of whether the technology has delivered its promise and has proven itself in the enterprise is still unclear, despite the numerous existing success stories.
Every emerging technology and disruptive innovation has to overcome the challenge of “crossing the chasm” between the early adopters, who are just eager to experiment with the technology potential, and the majority of the companies, who need a proven technology that can be reliably used in mission critical scenarios and deliver quantifiable cost savings.
Succeeding with a Semantic Technology product in the enterprise is a challenging task involving both top quality research and software development practices, but most often the technology adoption challenges are not about the quality of the R&D but about successful business model generation and understanding the complexities and challenges of the technology adoption lifecycle by the enterprise.
This talk will discuss topics related to the challenge of “crossing the chasm” for a Semantic Technology product and provide examples from Ontotext’s experience of successfully delivering Semantic Technology solutions to enterprises.
Advertising agencies are obsessed with innovation. They also have one of the most unique sets of creative talent of any industry. Yet the creative department is the most suspicious of "innovation" of any group at the agency. Could it be that actually Creative Directors hold the keys to converting ad agencies into what so many desire: innovation partners to clients?
(special thanks to @seelydiaplay for presentation design help)
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.
This presentation explore the 3 key elements of Design Thinking concept:
1) mind-set
2) process and
3) tool
Thinking of design as an experience rather than isolated objects help us deal with much more complex world - Tim Brown
A way of approaching business problem in the same way designers approach design problem - Roger Martin
No longer associated simply with objects and appearances, design is increasingly understood in a much wider sense as the human capacity to plan and produce desired outcomes. - Bruce Mau
Design as a way of thinking, an approach to solving problems
Capturing Contexts: A workshop with jobs-to-be-done tools / Service Experienc...Martin Jordan
Customers hire services and products to do a certain job. Once people spot a job in their life they start looking for a solution, an offering that helps them to get the job done. Which offering they eventually hire often depends on the circumstances in which the job occurs.
This workshop highlighted the importance of customers’ situations and contexts when creating new offerings. As circumstances are changing, people’s related needs and desired outcomes do too. Using the example of food-related services, the workshop at Service Experience Camp 2015 illustrated how all offerings fulfil the general need of feeding humans, but also which specific situations each service caters for.
The workshop was run by Andrej Balaz, Hannes Jentsch and Martin Jordan on November 14, 2015 at Service Experience Camp in Kalkscheune in Berlin-Mitte.
Crossing the Chasm with Semantic TechnologyMarin Dimitrov
After more than a decade of active efforts towards establishing Semantic Web, Linked Data and related standards, the verdict of whether the technology has delivered its promise and has proven itself in the enterprise is still unclear, despite the numerous existing success stories.
Every emerging technology and disruptive innovation has to overcome the challenge of “crossing the chasm” between the early adopters, who are just eager to experiment with the technology potential, and the majority of the companies, who need a proven technology that can be reliably used in mission critical scenarios and deliver quantifiable cost savings.
Succeeding with a Semantic Technology product in the enterprise is a challenging task involving both top quality research and software development practices, but most often the technology adoption challenges are not about the quality of the R&D but about successful business model generation and understanding the complexities and challenges of the technology adoption lifecycle by the enterprise.
This talk will discuss topics related to the challenge of “crossing the chasm” for a Semantic Technology product and provide examples from Ontotext’s experience of successfully delivering Semantic Technology solutions to enterprises.
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.
Business Design Toolkit - Design Sojourndesignsojourn
The Business Design Toolkit is used to help businesses leverage Design Led Innovation. For more information, please go to: http://www.designsojourn.com/business-design-toolkit/
The concept of jobs to be done provides a lens through which we can understand value creation. The term was made popular by business leader Clayton Christensen in The Innovator’s Solution, the follow-up to his landmark book The Innovator’s Dilemma.
It’s a straightforward principle: people “hire” products and services to get a job done.
For instance, you might hire a new suit to make you look good for a job interview. Or, you hire Facebook to stay in touch with friends on a daily basis. You could also hire a chocolate bar to reward yourself after work. These are all jobs to be done.
Although companies like Strategyn and The Rewired Group have been using the JTBD for many years, the framework has gotten a lot of attention recently. I’ve been fortunate to have worked with JTBD in various contexts in the past, and I included the topic in throughout my new book, Mapping Experiences.
Design Thinking & Agile Innovation Workshop combining elements from Design Thinking, Customer Development, Christensen's Jobs to be Done, Osterwalder's Value Proposition Canvas, Javelin Experiment Board, Lean Startup and Paper Prototyping.
Ai and Design: When, Why and How? - Morgenbooster1508 A/S
This year, A and I became the probably most used letters in the alphabet. Time to reflect upon the role we play as designers in an increasingly AI-driven landscape.
The way businesses need to organize and behave has fundamentally shifted. Across industries, companies, and organizational functions, we have heard many of the world’s most innovative companies echo the same challenge: businesses must urgently embrace a more nimble and entrepreneurial approach in order to stay competitive. We call this challenge of how big companies can leverage scale while staying innovative “big entrepreneurship.” This report aims to deconstruct some of the complex challenges around big entrepreneurship and provide actionable insights for business leaders.
This report was created by Fahrenheit 212, a global innovation strategy and design firm. We define innovation strategies and develop new products, services, and experiences that create sustainable, profitable growth for our clients. We challenge the belief that innovation is inherently unreliable and have spent the last decade designing the method, building the model, and assembling the minds to make innovation a predictable driver of growth for our clients' businesses.
A B2B SaaS marketing leader with over 10 years of experience in growth-stage product companies, Mohita Nagpal is currently the VP of Marketing at Hiver. She started her career in print journalism and transitioned to marketing when she joined Wingify as a Content Specialist. She is a full-stack marketer with experience in demand generation, PPC, branding, and product marketing. She loves building content-driven inbound engines to fuel the Sales-Marketing funnel and is a strong proponent of making B2B marketing more human.
Do-it-yourself toolkit to audit the user experience of your products and services.
We know that UX is too important for every business to be ignored.
But we recognize that not all businesses have a dedicated team or person in-house to do this, or have the budget to hire consultants.
This DIY toolkit provides a step-by-step guide for anyone to do a simple experience audit.
Introduction for Design thinking :
What is Design thinking?
Why to use Design thinking?
What is Design thinking mindset?
Balance for Analytical and Intuitive thinking.
Traditional thinking vs Design thinking.
Combination of Divergent and Convergent thinking.
A talk I gave at CoThinkTank11 about design thinking and social business innovation. I argued that we need to focus less on rhetoric and more on building practical tool that help people learn to innovate.
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.
Business Design Toolkit - Design Sojourndesignsojourn
The Business Design Toolkit is used to help businesses leverage Design Led Innovation. For more information, please go to: http://www.designsojourn.com/business-design-toolkit/
The concept of jobs to be done provides a lens through which we can understand value creation. The term was made popular by business leader Clayton Christensen in The Innovator’s Solution, the follow-up to his landmark book The Innovator’s Dilemma.
It’s a straightforward principle: people “hire” products and services to get a job done.
For instance, you might hire a new suit to make you look good for a job interview. Or, you hire Facebook to stay in touch with friends on a daily basis. You could also hire a chocolate bar to reward yourself after work. These are all jobs to be done.
Although companies like Strategyn and The Rewired Group have been using the JTBD for many years, the framework has gotten a lot of attention recently. I’ve been fortunate to have worked with JTBD in various contexts in the past, and I included the topic in throughout my new book, Mapping Experiences.
Design Thinking & Agile Innovation Workshop combining elements from Design Thinking, Customer Development, Christensen's Jobs to be Done, Osterwalder's Value Proposition Canvas, Javelin Experiment Board, Lean Startup and Paper Prototyping.
Ai and Design: When, Why and How? - Morgenbooster1508 A/S
This year, A and I became the probably most used letters in the alphabet. Time to reflect upon the role we play as designers in an increasingly AI-driven landscape.
The way businesses need to organize and behave has fundamentally shifted. Across industries, companies, and organizational functions, we have heard many of the world’s most innovative companies echo the same challenge: businesses must urgently embrace a more nimble and entrepreneurial approach in order to stay competitive. We call this challenge of how big companies can leverage scale while staying innovative “big entrepreneurship.” This report aims to deconstruct some of the complex challenges around big entrepreneurship and provide actionable insights for business leaders.
This report was created by Fahrenheit 212, a global innovation strategy and design firm. We define innovation strategies and develop new products, services, and experiences that create sustainable, profitable growth for our clients. We challenge the belief that innovation is inherently unreliable and have spent the last decade designing the method, building the model, and assembling the minds to make innovation a predictable driver of growth for our clients' businesses.
A B2B SaaS marketing leader with over 10 years of experience in growth-stage product companies, Mohita Nagpal is currently the VP of Marketing at Hiver. She started her career in print journalism and transitioned to marketing when she joined Wingify as a Content Specialist. She is a full-stack marketer with experience in demand generation, PPC, branding, and product marketing. She loves building content-driven inbound engines to fuel the Sales-Marketing funnel and is a strong proponent of making B2B marketing more human.
Do-it-yourself toolkit to audit the user experience of your products and services.
We know that UX is too important for every business to be ignored.
But we recognize that not all businesses have a dedicated team or person in-house to do this, or have the budget to hire consultants.
This DIY toolkit provides a step-by-step guide for anyone to do a simple experience audit.
Introduction for Design thinking :
What is Design thinking?
Why to use Design thinking?
What is Design thinking mindset?
Balance for Analytical and Intuitive thinking.
Traditional thinking vs Design thinking.
Combination of Divergent and Convergent thinking.
A talk I gave at CoThinkTank11 about design thinking and social business innovation. I argued that we need to focus less on rhetoric and more on building practical tool that help people learn to innovate.
This presentation was created to present the strategy for a 15 million dollar capital campaign for a community college. The strategy was to position giving as a form of investment rather than an act of charity.