Designer’s Pledge Drive

Fans of public radio might dread the last two words of this title, but this is not one of those pledge drives where we ask for money in return for tote bags and coffee mugs.  

This is not a request for funds, but rather an invitation to commit. 

In 2018 and 2019 a group of design practitioners, social impact funders, and investors gathered to consider how to promote design as a mechanism for social impact. One of the products of those conversations was a ten-point framework to help guide designers in their work.

A commitment to The Designer’s Pledge is about reminding ourselves that design can have a higher purpose—that design, when practiced with humility and with openness, has the potential to positively impact our world even in the most difficult of times, and perhaps especially so. It is neither a rulebook or instruction set. Faithful adherence to all ten points will not guarantee successful design but approaching design through these considerations might at least prepare us to be successful.

Let’s face it, design has too often failed to live up to its claims to make the world a better place. Where we seek to design for all, we too often design for some. Where we seek to be complete we sometimes forget to ask questions about the wider system and its constituents. Our enthusiasm for the new, the simple, the delightful can blind us to the unintended consequences of our work. Design has operated for most of its professional history under the influence of white privilege resulting in the woeful under-representation of Black, Brown, and Indigenous peoples.   

Design will always be a risky business, where the unknown can confound our best efforts, but that does not excuse us from the due consideration of how we should approach our work so as to minimize negative consequences and maximize positive impact.

For me, the pledge acts as a form of design meditation. It puts me into a state where I am better able to face the complexity of my work with responsibility and optimism. It cautions me while opening my mind to the possibilities of the work. It challenges me to think bigger but also to have humility and to remember that design is a service to others. 

I have hope that by sharing in a commitment to this pledge we can raise our expectations for what design might achieve and work together to fulfill them. 

Please join us.

Barbara Miller

Independent Special Markets Rep at Self Employed

4 年

Understanding,?Elevation,?Communication, Simplicity,?Safety, Beauty, I'm sure there are more and Simplicity is usually backed by Complexity. No good unless we broadly implement plans that Elevate all with both Short Term and Long Term plans. Individuals, small groups, large orgs.? A need for viable plans. We can intellectualize later.

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Nuno Sobrinho

Service Design Lead | Change Management Strategist

4 年

Wise words. Signed.

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Khwaja Shaik

IBM CTO ? Digitally-savvy and Cyber-savvy Board Director ? CEO Advisor ? Competent Boards Faculty ? Making Purpose Real Through Board Excellence ? Global Perspective, Digital Transformation, AI, Cybersecurity, ESG Expert

4 年

Thank You, Tim Brown, for the radical candor. Well said -design is a service to others.? #KSgems, #MyThoughts, #Insight #36: - We need a higher calling with the outward-in approach to solving humanity's problems. - Product managers must integrate design thinking in their product development efforts. - CIOs must revamp Enterprise #Architecture practices to focus on design thinking and information architecture. - Prioritize design to spur innovation with a CEO mandate. Huge need due to changes in business models for the post-COVID era. - Treat design thinking as a key element to provide competitive differentiation. History has shown that companies associated with higher design thinking excellence outperformed on standard financial performance measures, valuation, customer satisfaction, and value creation. - Profits and #purpose can co-exist when you embrace design thinking. #CIO #CTO #CEO Alan Murray CECP #Innovation

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Chris Dykas

Product Strategy & Delivery, UX Research & Interaction Design

4 年

Who's the audience for this pledge? Which designers are envisioned in this imagined (a-la Benedict Anderson) "we?" Looking at this passage from a mainstream perspective, versus a progressive one, yields two very different images in my head. "For me, the pledge acts as a form of design meditation. It puts me into a state where I am better able to face the complexity of my work with responsibility and optimism. It cautions me while opening my mind to the possibilities of the work. It challenges me to think bigger but also to have humility and to remember that design is a service to others."

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