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by James Utterback (Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, USA), Bengt-Arne Vedin (Mälardalen
University, Sweden), Eduardo Alvarez (VIGIX, Inc.), Sten
Ekman (Mälardalen University, Sweden), Susan Walsh Sanderson (Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, USA), Bruce Tether (University of
Manchester, UK) & Roberto Verganti (Politecnico di Milano,
Italy)
Design-inspired products delight the
customer. These make life easier, better or more interesting for the customer. Successful
firms do not consider design as a process to understand and satisfy current
user needs nor as a way to make a product look better, these firms see design
as an innovation strategy. A design-inspired innovation is so simple that it
becomes an extension of the user. It creates meaning and a new language.
Design-Inspired Innovation
explores the ways in which
communities of art, design, and innovation are merging and influencing each
other in the world of material culture to create great new products. What makes
products great? What is the role of design firms in creativity and innovation,
and how is this role changing? Does a focus on design inspire innovation and
enhance the chances of competitive success? What strategies might result in
most inspired design and innovation?
The book reports the results
of a study undertaken to explore these questions, which included interviews
with the founders of nearly 100 design firms in four countries - Sweden, Italy,
England, and the United States. Each approach to design-inspired innovation is
well explored with examples across products, companies, industries and markets.
Iconic Products
A design classic is long lived. Some products are design classics because of
their extraordinary impact on industries, markets and even economies. A design classic
is one that stays attractive for a long time, while being thoroughly
transformed under the hood and becomes an iconic product. Iconic products make
complexity invisible to the user.
New ecology
of innovation is unfolding. The boundaries of form and function are
becoming blurred or, perhaps more accurately, are intersecting. Few products
today function well on their own, nor are many services delivered without
intensive use of hardware and software. Both are increasingly defined by users'
participation and adaptation.
Need for integration In design-inspired innovation, the balance among technology, market
and meaning is unique. None can be neglected. Rather, balance results from a
vision about a possible future. This is referred to as an ideal design. The
essence of design is wholeness and integration. Understanding each component
and making the best component is not a winning strategy, but it is often the
implicit path that we take.
Open-Source Innovation Open standards and the increasing use of open source
innovation seem to be spreading roles across - indeed, breaking down
boundaries. Open standards allow for interaction, compatibility and integration.
Visualization
makes communication easier, ideas tangible more quickly, and, in the rough
sketch stage, allows designers to concentrate on the most essential aspects of
the idea - the design, the product, the system, or even the service. Design
must create an emotional response and tell a story. Design as a noun is visual
embodiment; design as a verb to a large extent relies upon visualization and modeling.
Sketching offers a creatively stimulating process and offers ways to convey and
receive messages about that which is tacit.
Avenues to Innovation can be adding finishing touches especially for products that are technically-driven,
innovating products by interacting with clients, visualization of the inventive
idea, corporate image design including brand, stationery, publications, value
chain design, innovative process design i.e. design to function also as a
management consultancy, innovation contracting, innovation without a client and
corporate strategy followed by innovative design.
Tools such as
sketches, blueprints and models, prototyping, analogies and metaphors,
storyboards, CAD, are some of the tools employed by the design process. Design
firms that introduce a greater number of prototypes may grow more rapidly than
those that maintain a tight focus.
Innovation by disruption The importance of disruptive innovation is not primarily
that a dominant design is ultimately overturned. Rather, it is that is broadens
the definition of a product category, and this may dramatically expand the
market. Innovations are disruptive not because they provide superior function
conventionally measured; often, they do not. Instead, to be disruptive an
innovation must provide a different and broader functionality.
Opportunities
for all people to maximize their potential and quality of life are broadened
through design. An example of a wheelchair with joystick, intelligent controls,
products that allow participation in sports and latest to climb chairs broadens
human possibilities through design.
Network The
innovation process is more networked and involves a greater number of actors -
users, design firms and suppliers. The more the actors there are in a design
complex, the more diverse and varied are these actors. Further, the richer the
degree of communication links among them, the greater will be their propensity
to innovate.
Design-Inpired Inovation is an important contribution to better understanding
the hidden role that design plays in the innovation process - from the product
to the enterprise itself - and the different skills, methodologies and
sensibilities that designers bring to innovation. In design-inspired innovation
- that is, an innovation that proposes breakthrough messages - the driver of
innovation is neither technology (although technology is crucial as a means to
create new meanings) nor a customer requirement. Rather, it results from a
vision about the possible future.
Shamin Kamat, Student - Welingkar Institute
of Management Bangalore
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