Creative Culture
Illustration: Kaushik Panchal

Creative Culture

" The designer has a prescriptive rather than descriptive job. Unlike scientists who describe how the world is, designers suggest how it might be." - Bryan Lawson

If you're running any kind of creative company, what questions and processes should you come back to regularly to make sure you're on the right track and focusing your energy on what matters? What follows is a set of guiding principles to shape the creation of more sustainable design culture. It focuses on defining the problem, shaping product culture and creating a transparent process.


Defining the Problem

Defining the problem is an important part of figuring out a solution, and having clarity of vision. The following questions need to be posed and answered again and again throughout the product development process to make sure your product or services are on target.

1. What's the problem we think people have?

2. Do they in fact have this problem?

3. How do they solve this problem today?

4. How much do they spend to solve this problem?

5. How much does this problem impact their business/life?


Product Culture

Products and services are made by people. Those people need to feel valued, motivated, and happy. It's important to have a clear vision and ensure that your people are supported in its execution. Using this product culture framework and regularly asking the following questions of yourself and your team allows you to gauge the health of your organization.

  • Framework: What are the strategies that form the core of our company or service? ?
  • Form: How do we communicate our story? ?
  • Feel: How do people feel after using our product/service? ?
  • Function: Is it clear how to use our product or service?


Transparent Process

Once you have clearly defined the problem and have an engaged workforce, using a transparent process will help you create great products and services in a sustainable manner.


Framework

My framework is a way of logically laying out ideas, organizing them by Vision, Goals, Strategy, Tactics, and Tasks. The framework is a flexible tool which allows you to evaluate ideas at any level and helps you make decisions in real-time about your organization and product. It is also a tool to create consensus in your team about which ideas are truly connected to your vision and which ones are not.


Audience

It's important to understand the whole customer story. It's not about what?you?want them to do; it's about carefully understanding their current activities and then creating the best possible outcome for those activities. This will create real innovation instead of incremental change.


Market

Find the open spaces in culture; these are where the big opportunities are. This can be a hard path, since no one else is initially working in that space, but by addressing a gap it is also the one most aligned with your customers' needs. If by following your own path you create an innovation, you will have no competition. No competition allows you time and space to build your advantage.


Product Development

It's all about execution. We've all heard this phrase, but what does it mean? In this case it means that people want to see fully-formed products they can use, not half baked beta products. Creating complete products at each stage of your company's journey satisfies customer expectations and allows your ideas to evolve and change, learning through the challenge of creating real products.


Resources

No matter how many resources you have for a project, here's a simple breakdown: 50% will need to be spent on design production and development. The other 50% will be spent on understanding your audience, telling your story, and making sure your vision is big enough and aligned with the market of users.


要查看或添加评论,请登录

Kaushik Panchal的更多文章

  • Wayfinder

    Wayfinder

    Everyone needs a plan. A plan is like a map, but with important differences.

  • Be Kind

    Be Kind

    “There are three ways to ultimate success: The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind.

  • Conference rooms change culture

    Conference rooms change culture

    Maybe you’ve had that moment when you walk into an office and are looking for a conference room, and the room you’re…

  • Being lucky

    Being lucky

    You make your own luck. Have you ever been given that advice—while in the same breath it’s applied to some titan of…

  • Average cover band

    Average cover band

    If you have never heard of Robert Elms I would recommend you check out his radio show on BBC Radio London. He’s a music…

  • Set challenges, not goals

    Set challenges, not goals

    Summer 2018. The football World Cup has kicked off in Russia and this is the starting point for my son Luca’s football…

  • Teamwork

    Teamwork

    “Getting the team right is the necessary precursor to getting the ideas right.” - Ed Catmull and Amy Wallace…

  • Walk Don’t Run

    Walk Don’t Run

    If you don’t follow soccer/football, you might not have heard of Paul Scholes. But if you listen to what some of the…

  • Your dreams one hour at a time

    Your dreams one hour at a time

    Do you have a special goal? Going on a dream vacation, writing a book, becoming a YouTuber? How many hours do you have…

  • My favorites from Design and Culture in 2024 | Design + Culture

    My favorites from Design and Culture in 2024 | Design + Culture

    At the close of 2024, I wanted to share my three favorite articles from Design and Culture this year. The first…