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Change by Design: How Design Thinking Creates New Alternatives for Business and Society: How Design Thinking Can Transform Organizations and Inspire Innovation [Hardcover]

Tim Brown
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Book Description

15 Oct 2009
The myth of innovation is that brilliant ideas leap fully formed from the minds of geniuses. The reality is that most innovations come from a process of rigorous examination through which great ideas are identified and developed before being realized as new offerings and capabilities. This book introduces the idea of design thinking, the collaborative process by which the designer's sensibilities and methods are employed to match people's needs not only with what is technically feasible and a viable business strategy. In short, design thinking converts need into demand. It's a human-centered approach to problem solving that helps people and organizations become more innovative and more creative. Design thinking is not just applicable to so-called creative industries or people who work in the design field. It's a methodology that has been used by health organizations to increase the quality of patient care by re-examining the ways that their nurses manage shift change, or rethink supply chain management.

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Change by Design: How Design Thinking Creates New Alternatives for Business and Society: How Design Thinking Can Transform Organizations and Inspire Innovation + The Art Of Innovation: Success Through Innovation the IDEO Way + The Ten Faces of Innovation: Strategies for Heightening Creativity
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Collins Business (15 Oct 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061766089
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061766084
  • Product Dimensions: 15.2 x 2.7 x 22.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 92,605 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

"Brown makes a potent case for employing this creative collaboration in a variety of settings."--Miami Herald

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful
By Robert Morris TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
I recently read two books (this one written with Barry Katz and Roger Martin's The Design of Business) and am reading a third (Neil Sheehan's A Fiery Peace in a Cold War) in which major organizational transformations are accomplished by those who understand the power of design thinking, help their colleagues to do so, and then together, take an approach, Tim Brown suggests, "that is powerful, effective, and broadly accessible, that can be integrated into all aspects of business and society, and that individuals and teams can use to generate breakthrough ideas that are implemented and that therefore have high impact. Design thinking, the subject of this book, offers just such an approach." He goes on to acknowledge, "I was trained as an industrial designer, but it took me a long time to realize the difference between [begin italics] being [end italics] and [begin italics] thinking like [end italics] a designer. That strikes me as a critically important distinction. Brown views the power of design "not as a link in a chain but as the hub of a wheel"...not as a stage in a process but as a center of gravity, as a gravitational/centrifugal force, with involvement at all levels and in all areas of operation. "Design is now too important to be left to designers."

Brown carefully organizes his material with two Parts. First, he introduces a set of principles for design thinking that be applied by almost anyone in any organization, whatever its size and nature may be. He involves his reader in a journey through the important stages of thinking. He provides a framework that he hopes will help the reader identify the principles and practices that make for great design thinking. He focuses on design thinking as applied to business and examines a number of the most innovative companies in the world, such as his own firm, IDEO, as well as Bank of America, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Google, Intel, Kaiser Permanente, Mattel, Mayo Clinic, Pixar, Procter & Gamble, and Shimano. Each of these companies has established a culture within which there is a constant generation of ideas. After rigorous evaluation according to criteria that are most appropriate for the given context, and frame-of-reference, the focus of most promising ideas shifts from problem to project. This requires articulation of a clear goal at the outset. Design thinking "creates natural deadlines that impose discipline and [provide] an opportunity to review progress, make midcourse corrections, and redirect future activity. The clarity, direction, and limits of a well-defined project are vital to sustaining a high level of creative energy."

Where to begin a project? Brown recommends first formulating the brief that can allow for serendipity, unpredictability, and "the capricious whims of fate," then assembling the project team, selecting those who have multidisciplinary capabilities, are not risk averse, are what Roger Martin characterizes as "integrative thinkers," welcome collaboration, and thrive on challenges. The importance of design thinking to this process cannot be exaggerated. It starts with divergence, expanding the range of options rather than limit them; it balances the perspectives of users and is what I could call "beneficiary-centric"; helps to accelerate time to first prototype (a subject to which Brown devotes a great deal of attention, notably on Pages 87-108); "shares the inspiration" within internal knowledge networks; accommodates the reality that there are no silver bullets for innovation, only "silver buckshot"; allocate resources to accommodate fast-paced, unruly, and disruptive innovation initiatives; and enables creative innovators "to bridge the chasm between thinking and doing because they [are] passionately committed to the [common] goal of a better life and a better world around them."

Here in Dallas, we have a Farmer's Market near the downtown area at which several vendors offer slices of fresh fruit so that people can sample for taste. In that spirit, here are two brief excerpts from Brown's lively and eloquent narrative:

On an approach to innovation that consists of a "judicious blend" of bottom-up experimentation and guidance from above: "The rules for this approach are as simple to state as they are challenging to apply:

1. The best ideas emerge when the whole organizational ecosystem - not just its designers and engineers and certainly not just management has room to experiment.

[Note: In 1924, William L. McKnight, then CEO of 3M observed, "If you put fences around people, you get sheep. Give people the room they need." That is especially true of those who participate in brainstorming sessions. ]

2. Those most exposed to changing externalities (new technology, shifting customer base, strategic threats or opportunities) are the ones best placed to respond and most motivated to do so.

3. Ideas should not be favored based on who creates them. (Repeat aloud.)

4. Ideas that create a buzz should be favored. Indeed, ideas should gain a vocal following, however small, before being given organizational support.

5. The `gardening' skills of senior leadership should be used to tend, prune, and harvest ideas. MBAs call this `risk tolerance.' I call it the top-down bit.

6. An overarching purpose should be articulated so that the organization has a sense of direction and innovators don't feel the need for constant supervision."

On brainstorming: "Brainstorming, ironically, is a structured way of breaking out of structure. It takes practice...[All organizations have their own rules] that lay out the playing field within which a team of players can perform at high levels...At IDEO we have dedicated rooms for our brainstorming sessions and the rules are literally written on the walls: Defer judgment. Encourage wild ideas. Stay focused on the topic. The most important of them, I would argue, is `Build on the ideas of others.' It's right up there with `Thou shalt not kill' and `Honor thy father and thy mother,' as it ensures that every participant is invested in the last idea put forward and has the chance to move it along."

Recall a previous reference to the "journey" on which Brown invites his reader to embark. "There are useful starting points and helpful landmarks along the way, but the continuum of innovation is best thought of as a system, of overlapping spaces rather than a sequence of orderly steps." As Brown makes crystal clear, the reason for the iterative, non-linear nature of the journey "is not that design thinkers are disorganized or undisciplined but that design thinking is fundamentally an exploratory process; it will invariably make unexpected discoveries along the way, and it would be foolish not to find out where they lead."

Bon voyage!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Way To Think 5 Mar 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
As Tim Brown recognises in this book, design thinking is not new. But he has done all of us a great service by coining (with his IDEO colleagues) the term "design thinking" and setting out very clearly in this book what it means. He points out that almost any problem can benefit from design thinking, which essentially involves (1) taking a flexible approach to problem solving, (2) combining convergent and divergent thinking and (3) prototyping solutions.

My only slight criticism of this book is that he covers the essentials of design thinking in about half of it. The rest involves examples that are interesting (and an excellent advertisement for the skills of IDEO) but carry much less insight. But it is not clear to me what could have been done to improve on this -- perhaps a little design thinking would provide the answer!
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars An empty book 30 Aug 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Tim Brown had an interesting article in HBR (Harvard Business Review), June 2008 p. 84, entitled 'Design Thinking'. This gives a fine description of the way IDEO designs tangible products. The book in case written by Tim Brown "with" Barry Katz (the latter not mentioned on the book cover) is an expansion of this article and adds not much extra except for an endless list of tiny examples of IDEO's work. Buying the book I expected tools, diagrams, and techniques described but got absolutely nothing of the kind. Especially the complete lack of drawings and diagrams surprised me, because IDEO usually displays itself as a visual, tangible company. The "with" associated with Mr. Katz' name makes me imagine that Mr. Brown designed the structure of the book, and Mr. Katz wrote the content based on stories from and conversations with Mr. Brown. Having read - to some extent browsed - the book I felt I had an empty book in my hand.
A recent HBR article (Sept. 2008 p. 92) written by a HBR editor: "Kaiser Permanente's Innovation on the Front Lines" elaborates on the Kaiser examples already given in both the 2008 article and here. If you have access to the two HBR articles you are much better off. If not acquiring the book offers some insight in IDEO's way of doing product and process development.
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