Product design gurus suggest ways to improve the processes
-- Control Engineering, 2/7/2006
Las Vegas, NV—Many offer gobbledygook on how to be more creative, say two who spend some time themselves offering advice on creative design. Richard Seymour and Dick Powell, cofounders of Seymourpowell, a 20-year-old London-based product design
consultancy, and co-stars of a television show on product design, recently
discussed ways to improve the design process.
Some people are more
creative than others, they say, but there are various tools can help people
cultivate creativity inherent in everyone. To improve design processes, Seymour
and Powell suggest that that you:
· Factor in cultural changes;
· Think differently by using ideas related to people, rather than things;
· Step outside traditional processes to envision new categories of design;
· Observe what people do over what they say;
· Start early enough;
· Don’t talk about consumers; and
· Think “why not,” all to develop products that
are “Better by Design” (the name of their popular British television
series).
Creativity should be fueled by a rich passion for design and
innovation. Think of design as a process, not a noun. The idea (inspiration) is
more important than the work (perspiration) that follows, although that’s
certainly significant as well. Ideas come with rich knowledge, immersion in
everything that’s going on: society, people, technology, science, business and
economic trends. Blips appear; creative thoughts don’t often happen with linear
thinking. Staying ahead of the curve means considering everything in the current
target environment as an archeological dig.
Look rather than see. Do user
research and don’t only listen to what people say, because they might be
deceiving themselves about what they think they want. Sometimes leading designs
derive from watching behaviors. Consider differences in cultures and gender. Men
often are linear in emotions and with how they think and work. Women, for the
most part, are emotionally and intellectually more complex.
Watch for big
ideas among the unexpected. Three things that emerged en-route to another
“destination” include telephones, penicillin, and microwave ovens. Clients’
visions of what should be often are mired in tradition and limited by what they
think cannot be done.
Design slides along a spectrum between
engineering/industry and art/culture. A wide bandwidth of thought is essential
to creating interesting designs, incorporating richness beyond the scope of
current mindsets. Rain, for instance, is one-dimensional in English, but many
Native American languages contain dozens of words for rain. Similarly, if a
solution complies with present thinking and current boundaries, then the most
basic emotional and physical satisfactions may not be met. Sometimes, answers
are not in the fingertips, but in the gaps in-between. Limiting design because
of engineering or other constraints often results in mediocrity. Changing
innovative design to accommodate present limits also can destroy a beautiful
design.
A successful design can take something that’s boring and make a
user look forward to it every time. Design can be a creative event, assembling
people with knowledge, research, ideas, beliefs to roast traditional
customer-based thinking, work together, and emerge with a concept in a
relatively short time, perhaps 48 hours.
In the ultimate pursuit of
“fast, good, and cheap” designs, getting two out of three is much easier than
hitting all three, which often requires doing something totally different. Those
companies that always seem to get to the next big design craze first do so
because they started earlier to look farther into the future. There’s no point
in looking at next year. Think seven or eight years ahead, look back to the
present, then create stepping-stones to get to where you need to be. Such a
shift in perspective is massively important.
Seymour and Powell, whose clients include Ford, HP, Minolta, Nokia, Samsung, and Unilever, spoke recently at SolidWorks World 2006, Las Vegas; more than 3,700 attended the conference and show, SolidWorks said.
—Control Engineering Daily News Desk
Mark T. Hoske, editor in chief, mhoske@reedbusiness.com



















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