Design Untangled | A UX & design podcast in plain English Chris Mears & Carla Lindarte
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UX has a usability problem.
Chris and Carla are on hand to help you navigate through the jargon, user flows and mind maps so you can concentrate on designing great things for users.
**Disclaimer** The views on this podcast are ours and don’t represent the views of any former or current employers or clients.
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BONUS: Emma Goddard - Inclusive Design: Benefits to Users and Organisations
Inclusive design is about more than just making something accessible. It takes into account all forms of difference in humans such as gender, culture and other diverse attributes.
Particularly important is looking at situations where people are excluded from using a product or service and ensuring that the needs of those people are catered for.
About our guest
Emma Goddard is Head of Inclusive Design at Deloitte Digital UK. She's spent the last five years channeling her creative energy as a designer into engaging with excluding communities to create solutions that allow everyone to participate in the digital and physical world.
Emma’s led a number of inclusive design engagements across industries, particularly healthcare. Most recently this includes her role leading a team of 17 as Head of Inclusive Design for NHS Test & Trace. She’s also the Co-Chair of the BIMA Inclusive Design Council.
What you’ll learn
How inclusive design differs from accessibility
Why inclusive design is important for organisations
How do you get buy-in to practice inclusive design in your organisation?
What are some key challenges in setting an inclusive design agenda?
Show notes
Microsoft Inclusive Design Toolkit
Kat Holmes - Mismatch -
S2E6: Alex Paquin - How to maximise customer experience with branding
We’ve partnered with ProtoPie, the future of interactive product design, to help you navigate through uncertainty and overcome the challenges today's unprecedented conditions have brought to the industry. Join us for Season 2 - Designing for a new level of uncertainty.
Advertising and branding have been around as long as there have been things to sell. What new and innovative approaches can brands use to maximise their marketing impact and deliver solutions that satisfy today’s ever changing customer needs?
How do different cultures affect the approach for creating and marketing products and how does the marketing itself have to change to appeal to customers?
What techniques can be used to explore creative ideas that aren’t necessarily part of a brief provided by a client? How can this culture be embedded in an agency’s way of working?
About our guest
Alex is the Chief Executive Officer, and founder of Zerotrillion, a global
creative agency that provides services to organisations in different continents, with very diverse cultures and approaches to marketing.
Alex has worked at a number of agencies during his career in Dubai, Amsterdam and Toronto. He brings a wealth of experience from his background in criminology and social psychology and applies this to creating experiences for well-known and upcoming brands.
What you’ll learn
What do creatives do in an advertising agency?
How can behavioural psychology be used to form part of a design or marketing approach?
What is unique about brands and their customers in Dubai?
How do you create brands for future looking brands and ideas like sustainability?
How are you are brands and marketers adapting to the changes that have happened in consumer the landscape in 2020?
Show notes
Wally Olins - Brand Handbook
Ben Horowitz - The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Building a Business When There Are No Easy Answers -
S2E5: Jani Cortesini - How to run design sprints virtually
We’ve partnered with ProtoPie, the future of interactive product design, to help you navigate through uncertainty and overcome the challenges today's unprecedented conditions have brought to the industry. Join us for Season 2 - Designing for a new level of uncertainty.
Design Sprints have been around for quite some time. It is a process that has been created by Google and adopted by many. It allows businesses to get answers to strategic questions quickly, using design thinking methods and tools.
The ZOO, Google's creative think tank for brands and agencies, has adopted and implemented Design Sprints as a way of helping brands quickly ideate, iterate, prototype and test creative ideas that then get implemented and launched.
During lockdown and due to people not being able to get together in a workshop environment, Design Sprint Masters have had to utilise different tools and methods of facilitation, and have had to change the process to fit with the new reality.
In this episode you’ll learn more about how they’re doing it at Google ZOO, what they’ve learnt in the process so far, what has worked and hasn’t worked as well as tips to make your remote sprints successful.
About our guest
Jani runs Design Sprints to help brands and agency partners solve business problems through user insight, Google Technology (from Machine Learning and Voice Interfaces to YouTube Content and Data Driven Creative) and rapid prototyping.
What you’ll learn
What problems do Design Sprints solve?
What’s the best thing about Design Sprints?
What are some of the challenges clients have implementing them?
When shouldn’t you use a Design Sprint?
What are the challenges in running Sprints remotely?
What are some of the benefits of facilitating things remotely?
What methods have had to change due to the pandemic?
Are Design Sprints as effective when not done in person?
How does prototyping work in a remote environment?
How have Design Sprints evolved over time?
Show notes
About Google ZOO
All about Design Sprints -
S2E4: Anthony Baker - Using AI and machine learning to reduce uncertainty
We’ve partnered with ProtoPie, the future of interactive product design, to help you navigate through uncertainty and overcome the challenges today's unprecedented conditions have brought to the industry. Join us for Season 2 - Designing for a new level of uncertainty.
Design and the technology used to implement it, have always been two sides of the same coin. How can these two disciplines come together and utilise new technological tools like artificial intelligence, language processing and machine learning to deliver better experiences? Can these technologies help Designers make more informed decisions and mitigate risk?
Different cultures can also impact the challenges Designers and Technologists face. How is the Japanese digital landscape different to the UK and what opportunities does it bring for creativity?
About our guest
From Costa Rica in South America to Japan, Anthony Baker has a very interesting and international trajectory. Currently, he is Executive Technology Director at R/GA. He was based in London and then moved to Japan, learnt the language and now manages teams and clients in the region.
What you’ll learn
How does the design and business culture differ in Japan and what are the challenges?
How can you overcome a culture of consensus and lack of risk taking to push boundaries?
How can technology and design work together to create digital experiences that meet user needs?
How can you get clients and stakeholders involved in prototyping?
How can artificial intelligence and machine learning enhance the experiences we can build for customers?
How does technology allow you to make better design decisions?
Should design and user needs drive the technology we use or vice versa?
What changes have there been around the digitisation of internal platforms in Japan to help ways of working during the pandemic?
Show notes
Disrupting Japan podcast
The Happiness Lab -
S2E3: Eduardo Sonnino - How to design tactile hardware experiences remotely
We’ve partnered with ProtoPie, the future of interactive product design, to help you navigate through uncertainty and overcome the challenges today's unprecedented conditions have brought to the industry. Join us for Season 2 - Designing for a new level of uncertainty.
If you are a digital designer you may be used to designing experiences for existing hardware your customers may use, such as a smartphone or tablet.
But how do you approach designing for an entirely new device?
How do you ensure both new hardware and the software on it meet customer needs and work together as a seamless experience? And how do you test this experience that’s been designed in the hands of real customers in the middle of a global pandemic?
About our guest
Eduardo is a Senior Product Designer at Microsoft and was most recently involved in the development of the new Surface Duo and had to come up with different ways to respond to new customer needs due to the Coronavirus pandemic.
The Surface team sits at the interjection between software and hardware and involves both hardware and software engineers and designers. Eduardo talks to us about how these disciplines come together to create unified experiences for customers.
What you’ll learn
How do hardware and software come together to form new experiences?
How do you prototype experiences that involve hardware and software elements?
What techniques can you use to test both hardware and software when there is limited access to users for usability testing given the Covid-19 restrictions?
What teams and skill sets do you need to create these combined experiences?
What challenges are there in testing hardware with customers during a pandemic and what research approaches can you use?
How have customer needs around personal technology and home tech changed as a result of the increased time we are spending at home?
How does a hardware and software team come together to make design decisions around the hardware itself?
What things can you learn from users only when a product is post-release?
How do you test for human factors such as neurology or ergonomics during the design process?
Show notes
Finish: Give yourself the gift of done - John Acuff -
S2E2: Kieron Leppard - Is Design Thinking still the answer?
We’ve partnered with ProtoPie, the future of interactive product design, to help you navigate through uncertainty and overcome the challenges today's unprecedented conditions have brought to the industry. Join us for Season 2 - Designing for a new level of uncertainty.
Design Thinking has been used for many years as a framework to solve all kinds of problems. Is this methodology still valid, when customers, organisations and the society are facing a completely new and unprecedented set of conditions?
Kieron Leppard shares his experience working with different clients during the pandemic, talks about the challenges they’re facing and gives his point of view on Design Thinking and how designers can help make change rather than just being part of it.
He also highlights the accelerated importance of "Society Centered Design” and how this should be part of everything designers and organisations are delivering during this time. Kieron believes Design Thinking is still the right methodology to deliver value, but he encourages Designers to focus on real solutions rather than just deliverables.
Speculative design processes and constant prototyping and testing are some of the techniques that Kieron thinks Designers should keep utilising in order to respond to this new level of uncertainty.
About our guest
Kieron is the Vice President Experience Design at HUGE. Apart from juggling family during two lockdowns in the UK, Kieron has also been helping his clients respond quickly to their digital needs.
Kieron is an Interaction Designer at heart.This means he designs how people interact with brands, products, services and experiences to get something done. How they look, how they behave, how they feel. He is always. He always gives a fresh perspective on design and provides tangible and practical advice.
What you’ll learn
How has Covid-19 impacted what businesses are asking from designers
How can designers help clients navigate this new level of uncertainty
What can designers do to help companies unlock existing value rather than looking for new products or services
What is society centered design and how do you apply it
How can designers help with change and not just to be part of it
Is our responsibility as designers to help define the new normal
Show notes
Rethinking Design Thinking
Design will grow up
Society Centered Design