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Designing for Growth

Designing for Growth

A Design Thinking Tool Kit for Managers (Columbia Business School Publishing)
by Jeanne Liedtka 2011 229 pages
3.99
1k+ ratings
Business
Design
Management
Listen
7 minutes

Key Takeaways

1. Design thinking is a systematic approach to problem-solving and innovation

Design thinking can do for organic growth and innovation what TQM did for quality—take something we always have cared about and put tools and processes into the hands of managers to make it happen.

Design thinking demystified. Design thinking is not magic or exclusive to designers. It's a systematic problem-solving approach accessible to all managers. It starts with understanding customers deeply and creating a better future for them, acknowledging that the first attempt may not be perfect.

Key principles of design thinking:

  • Empathy: Deeply understanding customers' needs and experiences
  • Invention: Creating novel solutions to meet those needs
  • Iteration: Continually refining ideas based on feedback and learning

Design thinking complements traditional business analysis, bringing a human-centered, creative approach to innovation. It helps managers move beyond incremental improvements to create breakthrough growth opportunities.

2. The design process follows four key questions: What is? What if? What wows? What works?

Design starts with empathy, establishing a deep understanding of those we are designing for.

The four questions framework. The design thinking process can be broken down into four key stages, each centered around a critical question:

  1. What is? - Explore and understand the current reality
  2. What if? - Imagine new possibilities and alternatives
  3. What wows? - Identify the most promising concepts
  4. What works? - Test and refine ideas in the real world

This framework provides a clear roadmap for innovation projects, ensuring teams thoroughly explore the problem space before jumping to solutions. It balances divergent thinking (generating many options) with convergent thinking (narrowing down to the best ideas).

3. Visualization and journey mapping provide deep customer insights

Journey mapping leads you through your customer's current experience, facilitated by data gathered through observation and interviewing.

Seeing through customers' eyes. Visualization techniques help teams capture and communicate complex information about customer experiences. Journey mapping, in particular, provides a powerful tool for understanding the entire customer experience, including emotional highs and lows.

Key visualization techniques:

  • Customer journey maps
  • Personas
  • Empathy maps
  • Storyboards
  • Photo and video ethnography

These tools help teams develop empathy for customers, identify pain points and opportunities, and communicate insights effectively within the organization. They provide a shared understanding that fuels innovative thinking in later stages.

4. Brainstorming and concept development generate innovative solutions

Creating new concepts depends a lot more on discipline than on creativity.

Structured ideation. Effective brainstorming requires more than just free-form idea generation. It demands careful preparation, clear ground rules, and a structured approach to capturing and building on ideas.

Key elements of successful brainstorming:

  • Diverse team composition
  • Clear problem framing
  • Trigger questions to stimulate thinking
  • Building on others' ideas
  • Quantity over quality initially

Concept development takes the raw output of brainstorming and transforms it into coherent, fully-formed solution concepts. This involves clustering related ideas, identifying themes, and combining elements to create robust proposals that can be evaluated against design criteria.

5. Assumption testing and rapid prototyping refine ideas efficiently

Prototyping uses an affordable loss calculation: What is learning worth?

Learning fast and cheap. Assumption testing helps teams identify the critical unknowns that could make or break a new concept. By explicitly stating assumptions and designing experiments to test them, teams can quickly validate or invalidate ideas before investing significant resources.

Rapid prototyping brings concepts to life quickly and inexpensively. Key principles include:

  • Start simple (e.g., paper prototypes)
  • Focus on learning, not perfection
  • Iterate rapidly based on feedback
  • Test specific elements as well as whole concepts

This approach allows teams to explore multiple options, fail fast, and refine ideas based on real-world feedback, significantly reducing the risk of large-scale failure later in the process.

6. Customer co-creation and learning launches validate concepts in the market

Any time you introduce an unfamiliar concept, you can expect to get it mostly wrong. That is why co-creation, using low-cost, low-fidelity prototypes, is so essential to reducing the risks and improving the speed of successful innovation.

Partnering with customers. Co-creation involves engaging potential customers in developing new offerings. This collaborative approach ensures solutions truly meet customer needs and builds buy-in early in the process.

Learning launches take promising concepts into the market for real-world testing. Key principles:

  • Set clear learning objectives
  • Define success metrics upfront
  • Constrain time, geography, or customer segments
  • Design for fast feedback cycles
  • Be prepared to iterate or pivot based on results

These approaches bridge the gap between concept and full-scale launch, providing valuable data to inform go/no-go decisions and refine offerings before major investments are made.

7. Implementing design thinking requires careful team selection and momentum management

As long as a project is clicking along and people feel productive, there is a positive buzz. The number one momentum builder is speed.

Building for success. Implementing design thinking in organizations requires more than just learning the tools and process. It demands careful attention to team composition, project selection, and maintaining momentum.

Key considerations for successful implementation:

  • Start small with manageable projects
  • Select diverse, cross-functional teams
  • Secure executive sponsorship
  • Create dedicated project spaces ("war rooms")
  • Establish regular check-ins and clear decision-making processes
  • Celebrate small wins and learning from failures

By focusing on these elements, organizations can create an environment where design thinking thrives, leading to sustained innovation and growth.

Last updated:

Review Summary

3.99 out of 5
Average of 1k+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

Designing for Growth receives mixed reviews, with an average rating of 3.99 out of 5. Readers appreciate its visual appeal and introduction to design thinking concepts, finding it useful for beginners. Some praise its practical tools and case studies, while others criticize the surface-level explanations and lack of depth for experts. The book's structure and organizing outlines are generally well-received. However, some readers find it repetitive and overly corporate. Translation quality in non-English versions is frequently criticized. Overall, it's considered a good primer for those new to design thinking.

Your rating:

About the Author

Jeanne Liedtka is a professor at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business and an expert in design thinking and innovation. She has extensive experience in strategy consulting and has authored several books on design thinking and its application in business. Liedtka's work focuses on helping managers and organizations integrate design thinking into their processes to drive growth and innovation. Her approach emphasizes practical tools and techniques that can be applied in various business contexts. She is known for her ability to bridge the gap between academic research and real-world business applications, making design thinking concepts accessible to a wide audience of managers and leaders.

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