I recently participated in an excellent webcast about “Service Design” by John Wooden and J Hruby of Fredricksen Communications. Many of the principles that were shared for designing excellent service experiences correspond with my work positioning integrity as a practical strategy for organizations:
Use a whole perspective. John Wooden, Fredricksen’s Director of Usability Services, discussed the importance of designing service experiences with not just customers and service users, but those who deliver the service, in mind. If processes are easy for one group but not the other, outcomes will be less than optimal and likely even fail. Merriam Webster’s definitions for “integrity” include being “whole”, or “complete.” How many times have organizations or leaders missed the mark because they neglected to adopt a “whole” perspective? Examples include neglecting key stakeholders, overlooking or discounting contrary opinions or missing critical market signals.
The best product, service experience and organizational designs appeal to us physically, mentally, emotionally and even spiritually, or artistically – to the whole person. Apple product success is due not only to functional excellence, but to artful design and its “coolness” factor. If we must wait in line for a service transaction, an experience that is appealing – or at least not unpleasant emotionally and aesthetically is preferable.
Form follows function. Whether designing a product, service experience or organizational structure, first be clear about intended use and outcomes. What purpose or purposes do we want a product, organization or service experience to serve; toward what end? When embarking on a service redesign, it’s important to keep the ends in mind; likely they are some combination of improving user or provider satisfaction, increasing efficiency and reducing costs.
A large part of architectural integrity is whether a design suits intended purposes for a building or office. Likewise, an organizational structure or chart reflects integrity when it serves intended purposes. An early critical step when I help clients consider organizational structure changes is to thoroughly articulate what any structural changes should accomplish. Alternative structures can then be evaluated against those desired goals. Using intended purposes or outcomes as design criteria guides creative thinking into the most productive channels and contributes to design integrity.
Think alignment. A great product design and experience can be either reinforced or not reinforced by an accompanying service design and experience. Together, they determine perceptions of how a brand fulfills its promise. For example, my perception of an automobile brand is determined by not only the vehicle itself, but by how it is serviced by the dealer. The quality of that experience is in turn determined by multiple interfaces, including a web site to schedule maintenance, the service desk, quality of the mechanical work, billing, car delivery and more. All of those interfaces need to be seamlessly connected in ways that consistently reinforce fulfillment of the brand promise. Merriam Webster’s definitions of integrity also include “seamless”, “connected” and “united.” Steps and players all along a service or supply chain that demonstrate unity, connectedness and seamlessness in service to desired ends display integrity.
Be authentic. Authenticity is a critical dimension of integrity; for products that includes uniqueness and originality. In the context of service design, Wooden and Hruby discussed another important aspect of authenticity: being real about what is true about customers. That means not assuming what service users or providers need and want, but actually asking them and collecting objective data. Whether designing a product or service experience, and for most other endeavors, we need to be careful about assumptions and test them. As Mark Twain said: “It’s not what we don’t know that will get us in trouble so much as what we think we know that just isn’t so.”
Be accountable. Being accountable includes accomplishing our objectives and fulfilling promises. As they say, “what gets measured get’s done”; that means that to accomplish service design objectives and any intentions, we need to collect appropriate measures. If the goals of service redesign are improved customer satisfaction and cost reduction, we need to measure results accordingly. Going back to the first principle, we also need to collect balanced measures that reflect a whole perspective. Achieving increased customer satisfaction and reduced costs while burning out service providers would not demonstrate integrity.
Things change. Design integrity of products, services and organizations requires attunement to changes that suggest modifications, and processes for revisiting designs to accommodate those changes.
How might you apply these principles for design integrity to:
Product design?
Service design?
Organization design?
Your life?
Design is inevitable. The alternative to good design is bad design, not no design at all.
Douglas Martin
The design process is really just Iterate, Iterate, Iterate.
Chris Clark