Smoothing the Way: The Designer as Facilitator
with Jess McMullin, nForm
Even the best design teams, methods, architecture and tools are no match for a project beset with political infighting, divided priorities or unfocused goals. To truly make an impact, product teams need to have business buy-in and a shared understanding of the project’s direction. Often, it’s up to designers to smooth the way and facilitate this consensus.
By greasing the tracks in the early stages of a project, designers can gain the much-needed support of business stakeholders, avoid wasted effort, increase their influence (within their teams and the company at large), and make a more meaningful difference with their work. The key is to bridge competing viewpoints, develop a common vision and break through project roadblocks. And it all starts with the right combination of tools and techniques.
In this session, you will:
- Discover how to bridge competing viewpoints, develop a common vision and eliminate roadblocks on your next project.
- Explore the ways in which your existing design skill-sets can be expanded to improve communication within your team and throughout you company.
- Learn facilitation techniques to help engage business stakeholders and manage the conflicting priorities and lack of direction that so often derail a project.
About Jess McMullin
Since 1997, Jess has focused his career on understanding and developing positive user experiences for his clients and their customers. Drawing on sources ranging from social sciences and behavioral research to gaming, market analysis and future trends, Jess generates client insights that drive innovation and create better customer experiences.
Jess often speaks at conferences focusing on user experience, design thinking and innovation, topics he also writes about on a regular basis. His ideas have been featured in several user-experience books, including Lou Rosenfeld and Peter Morville’s Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 2nd Ed. and Jesse James Garrett’s The Elements of User Experience.
In 2003, Jess founded nForm User Experience, a boutique consultancy that counts Comcast, Ancestry.com and the Canadian Patient Safety Institute as clients. Jess also organizes CanUX, the annual Canadian User Experience Workshop in Banff, Alberta, and he is the cofounder of the international Information Architecture Institute.
For Jess’s latest thoughts on business, design and innovation, visit his blog, bplusd (business + design).
3 Responses to “Smoothing the Way: The Designer as Facilitator”
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Supporting Documents
- Session Slides PDF 2.4MB
Keynotes
- ClearRx: From Masters Thesis to Medicine Cabinet
Deborah Adler, Milton Glaser, Inc. - One Laptop Per Child
Lisa Strausfeld, Pentagram - A Path, Adapted
Jan Chipchase - New Sources of Inspiration Design for Interaction Design
Dan Saffer, Adaptive Path


(14)
August 13th, 2007 at 11:15 am
[…] blogging from Adaptive Path UX Week 2007. Smoothing the Way: The Designer as Facilitator by Jess […]
August 13th, 2007 at 11:22 am
Jess’s session was a lot of fun, but the key thing I took away was the difference in the “design and approve” sketching exercise. It really brought his point home. I could listen to Jess all day.
Images of 2 sketches:
* http://www.flickr.com/photos/intelleto/1106882140/in/photostream/
* http://www.flickr.com/photos/intelleto/1106888826/in/photostream/
August 13th, 2007 at 11:52 am
I think the best part of Jess’s presentation is his frankness and wisdom about people’s inherent reluctance to working together and sharing what they’re thinking because they don’t want to look stupid or have their ideas picked apart.
It’s just another reminder that being a good designer is about more than just making good designs. It’s also about being open and unguarded and supportive in getting everyone (business partners, IT partners, etc.) to feel free to unleash their own inner designers.
More thoughts here.