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Design Thinking for Startups Amir Khella @amirkhella

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Page 2: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

What is Design?

It’s the process by which an artifact is brought into existence.

“Design is art that people use”- Ellen Lupton

Page 3: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

What is design thinking?

It’s a mindset of combining creative and analytical thinking and applying it toward solving a specific problem.

Page 4: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Bad definition.

"Unlike analytical thinking, design thinking is a creative process based around the ‘building up’ of ideas."

- Wikipedia

Page 5: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Good definition.

“A process of creative and critical thinking that allows information and ideas to be organized, decisions to be made, situations to be improved, and knowledge to be gained.”

- Charles Burnette

Page 6: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Design thinking combines CREATIVE and ANALYTICAL

thinking.

Page 7: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

It’s both abductive and deductive.

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Being deductive means using past knowledge to solve current problems.

Page 9: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Being abductive means imagining and

visualizing a future that should yet exist.

Page 10: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Today

Experiences

Patterns

Observations

Stories

Imagination

Possibilities

Uncertainty

Stories

Yesterday Tomorrow

Page 11: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Then, what’s innovation?

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It’s a byproduct of design thinking.

Page 13: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

It’s being comfortable going forward in a

state of uncertainty

Page 14: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

It’s believing that the best solution is yet to

be found.

Page 15: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

It’s the willingness to fail early and fail

often.

Page 16: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Unfortunately, that’s not what we learn in

school.

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School Life Real LifeMistakes are punished. Failure is not tolerated.

Mistakes are learning experiences.

Failure breeds success.

Given the questions; find the right answers.

Ask great questions; find the best answers.

Knowledge and certainty foster confidence.

Intuition and imagination create potential for using

knowledge.

Page 18: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

What makes a good design thinker?

Page 19: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

An observing eye and a constant sense of wonder.

Page 20: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

An empathetic attitude toward people’s behavior and habits.

Page 21: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

A questioning mindset that goes beyond the obvious.

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Patience to remain in problem space until the right questions are

identified.

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A holistic approach to problem solving.

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The willingness to experiment and build.

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A passion for collaboration.

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So, how does a startup integrate

design thinking into its process?

Page 27: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

1. Understand that design thinking is not just the

designer’s role; it’s everyone’s role.

Page 28: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Design is not about products; it’s about people.

Think beyond tasks;Their lives. Their challenges. Their dreams.The user’s journey starts long before they click that button.

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2. Understand and define the problem you’re trying to

solve.

Take the time to ask a lot of annoying WHY questions.And don’t move to the solution space too soon.

Page 30: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Create a story.Our brains are hardwired for stories. If

we like them, we remember them forever.

Like a good movie, design should tell a

good story.

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Communicate your story, and ask people to tell you what they

heard and what they think.

* Don’t be afraid that someone will steal your story; it’s very likely that many people had that idea before you, and did nothing about it.

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Sketch you ideas.

You don’t need to know how to draw in order to sketch.As long as your sketches capture your ideas, it doesn’t matter

if they “don’t look good”.

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Create quick and crude prototypes

Prototypes create conversations. They are ALIVE!The sooner they work, the sooner you realize what your product needs to be.

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3. Refine your prototype until it becomes like a movie trailer for

your product.

It will always remind you of your story. And don’t worry about it being too functional or

good looking.

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Create a design-friendly environment

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Remove walls between people.And encourage frequent conversations.

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Create design walls.

Imprint designs in the back of everyone’s mindPhoto courtesy of ewhitworth.com

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4. Run a weekly or monthly brainstorming meeting to

encourage wild ideas.

The best way to get good ideas is to get lots of ideas. And the best time to get good ideas may be when you don’t need them.

Page 39: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

5. Encourage your team to think visually.

Ask them to carry sketchbooks and to freely express their ideas on whiteboards.

Page 40: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Visit a design agency for a day

Design agencies typically create great design environments.

Page 41: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

6. Become your own best competition.

Don’t get too comfortable with success.A design is NEVER done. It’s never good enough.

Solve harder problems than your competition does.

Page 42: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

Define and embrace constraints as part of the creative process.

The main difference between a rocket and a bomb is that the former is a controlled explosion.

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Create a character for your product

What will your product be if it were a car? a phone? a shoe?Who will your product be if it were a movie star? a political figure?

Describe your products in human-like adjectives.

Page 44: Design Thinking for Startups - Fast Bridge · Design Thinking for Startups ¥ Visit my blog: I write short posts about design, business and life ¥ Sign up for an upcoming webinar

7. Hire T-shaped individuals.

They tend to be professional in one area, but are skilled in many other areas.

They are highly intuitive.And they work as bridges between disciplines.

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Discourage rigid roles.

Leave these roles to enterprises.Everyone should be a product caretaker.

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Encourage cross-training.

Give your designers business training and your developers design training.

Invite outsiders to come and talk about what they do, even if it’s nothing related to what your team is working on.

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If possible, elect a CDO role (Chief Design Officer)

Let people in your company understand that design is as valuable as technology and

business.

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Anyone can be a designerAnyone can be a good design thinker

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The most inspiring quote from a founder I’ve worked with.

“This looks exciting and scary. Let’s do it!”