Design Thinking for Change? A Fancy Word! What Is It Then!?

Design Thinking for Change? A Fancy Word! What Is It Then!?

To me, she is one of the best therapists in the country. She knows me and my cultural and family background so well that I cannot think of any other person to go to when I need to vent. She is a blessing in my life.

One summer day, we had an extra-long session. I was mad at her. She kept telling me I should change my mindset around an issue in my life. She kept telling me why. Her words were fancy and generic, and the longer we talked, the more confused I became! I knew she was right but did not know how to change. I wanted my problem to get solved. I was ready to change my mindset, but I needed a structure, a step-by-step system to tell me how to take action. I am an intuitive person, but I am also analytical.

I told her that I would not continue my therapy sessions unless she gave me an outline of upcoming sessions: what are the steps, my homework for each step, and what are the expected results?

I know therapy does not work like that! She acknowledged that I needed a sense of control over my journey ahead and the preparation to avoid surprises. She eventually gave me an outline to calm my mind, and that was when I started resolving my issue.

My first two articles discussed Design Thinking as a mindset shift. I know that we all need a structure around changing our mindsets. The human mind needs a framework around complexity to simplify it and to have a sense of control over it. This applies even more dramatically to change management practitioners because we are constantly bombarded by new models and techniques.

Have you ever searched the keywords “Design Thinking” on Google image? If not, I recommend you do so. You will find many colourful models. The number of different approaches is overwhelming! You might remember that in my first article, I said that Design Thinking is not another model. If so, then what about all these models?

These “models” are structures or frameworks that help us transition to a new mindset.?Each one has six common steps, two common characteristics and one underlying core principle. (Here, I should add a note: the structured approach of Design Thinking is the target of many critiques. Let's talk about it later.)

I call the steps Design Thinking practices. Just like what a designer would practice when creating a design. They are:

  1. Empathize
  2. Define
  3. Ideate
  4. Prototype
  5. Test
  6. Implement

The two common characteristics of all the frameworks you see:

  • Iteration
  • Divergence-Convergence

And the principle is Co-creation.

Let me explain each practice and how it relates to change management.

Empathize

The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines empathy as “the ability to share someone else’s feelings.” Design thinking at its core is the process of understanding the situation through our stakeholders’ eyes, recognizing where it can be improved, and then creating a better future for the people involved. This is similar to what we do before making change plans; we first ask:

  • Who are our stakeholders?
  • What is their current experience?
  • How could it be improved?

Define

Before crafting any change, including strategy and planning any change tactics, we should ensure we are solving the right problem. An example is a useless communication plan: either the channel is unsuitable for the sender, or the message itself doesn’t resonate with them. One main problem is that we do not speak the same language as the receivers. We craft the message without defining the problem and what this communication should convey.

Ideate

Here is when practices such as brainstorming help us to identify solutions. One of the reasons that brainstorming sessions fail is that we do not brainstorm solutions for the right problems. When we get it right during the define step, we can ideate solutions that match the problem that needs solving. Also, in Design Thinking, we do not create change tactics for the stakeholders; we co-create them with our stakeholders.

Prototype?

One of the most tangible differences between Design Thinking and traditional business thinking is the idea of prototyping. A prototype is the design of the first change tactic from which other tactics are developed. Often what the stakeholder wants is not what they communicate or what we understand. We can get feedback and agree on something tangible by making a small sample.

Test

The testing step or practice enables us to learn and course-correct before rolling out the large-scale change plans that we are not sure will work. This pilot saves us time, money and stress.

Implement

Implementation is not always talked about as a Design Thinking practice. However, I want to emphasize it because if the significant scaling does not happen after the testing phase, we cannot measure our change tactics’ actual effectiveness and realize the required benefits.

During each step, we iterate, and we learn. The nature of Design Thinking is divergence and convergence of thinking, moving between expansive and narrow contemplation. In each step, we broaden, and then we narrow down.

The Design Thinking framework helps us identify the problem or issue we need to solve, identify the best solution, and implement it effectively. It helps us transition to a new mindset about managing change, just like I did with my personal issue starting on the long summer day.

In the following articles, I go more into detail and discuss?how?we can practice each step of Design Thinking and how it can integrate into our current change management methodologies.

Do you want to see how exactly Design Thinking translates into Change Management far from all the fancy word’s subjectivity??Take a look here.

To your personal and professional growth,

This article first appeared in?Change Management Review. This article is the third article of the series on Design Thinking for Change Management (DTforCM?).

Homeira E.

Professor at Conestoga College-Business Models for Sustainability Consultant

2 年

I really like to follow your articles. Here, my curiosity goes to the step of “ co-creating”. Is there any tangible example for it as you can share here?

回复
Bill Staikos

Ranked #15 CX Leader, globally (CX Magazine). LinkedIn Top Voice. I help companies drive revenue, reduce costs, and improve culture.

2 年

Super insightful and thought provoking. Love this! Check this out Nina Bianchi.

shaghayegh chitsaz

Adjunct Professor at Iran University of Science and Technology

2 年

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