Design Thinking Posters for office, workshops, projects. You can order by emailing [email protected]
No title available
almost home
No title available

if i look back, i am lost

shark vs the universe
KIROKAZE
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

No title available
occasionally subtle
Monterey Bay Aquarium

@theartofmadeline

Kaledo Art

Andulka
Jules of Nature

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
No title available

#extradirty
Cosimo Galluzzi
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
@dtlandscape
Design Thinking Posters for office, workshops, projects. You can order by emailing [email protected]
GOOD STUDIOS BUILD GOOD WALLS
It is important when you walk into any studio that you feel as much as see what is being built — the studio should crackle with creative energy. Specifically, I believe you can determine the health of any design studio simply by looking at its walls. The benefit of getting work up and out of your computer and onto the walls of a studio are as follows:
Increases Visibility: Walls move work from the virtual to the physical world, allowing it to become even more visible, interactive, tangible, and environmental. Facilitate Conversations: Walls facilitate conversation and informal reviews because people naturally gather in front of them. Grows Collective Ownership: Walls create a culture of collective ownership because they invite people to literally build upon the ideas of others. Facilitates Iteration: Walls with heavy layering reflect healthy projects because they show that there have been several iterations to the work. Clarifies Ideas: When Walls get too complicated they can be torn down and re-built again. What sticks, sticks. Creates Connections: Walls also allow people to draw connections in non-linear ways because they allow you to see areas of tension, synergy, and overlap that you might not see otherwise. They allow you to see the whole picture through its individual elements. Simplifies Thinking: Other times, out of the seemingly visual complexity of images, the wall flips and a singular vision emerges. Inspires: When people are trying to envision new things they draw from the well of what they know. Often times ideas blossoms from our immediate environment such as walls or the bric-a-brac on desks.
A studio’s walls are living walls. Their viability depends on gardening and nurturing to foster creativity and productivity. This analogy extends to both their creation and destruction — both tilling and harvesting. Read more about our Wall in a joint research project conducted by Stanford University and Helsinki University of Technology here.
What do facilitators do?
The video is created by the International Institute of Facilitation and Change (IIFAC) and is now available also in Spanish, German, Russian, Chinese, Italian and Japanese.
Workshop "Facilitating the group design thinking process" at the IAF Europe MENA conference http://facilitationreloaded.com/ in Copenhagen, Denmark, 3-5 October, 2014, by Anna Ploskonos and Daniel Osterwalder
If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough.
Albert Einstein
Toolkits and books for Design Thinking Facilitators
Toolkits
d.school Bootcamp Bootleg, by d.school
AC4D Design Library, by AC4D
IDEO Human-Centered Design Toolkit, by IDEO
IDEO Method Cards, by IDEO
Frog Collective Action Toolkit, by Frog
Lockton Design with Intent Toolkit, by Dan Lockton and friends
Foresight & Innovation Method Cards, by Stanford
Books
101 Design Methods: A Structured Approach for Driving Innovation in Your Organization, by Vijay Kumar
Universal Methods of Design: 100 Ways to Research Complex Problems, Develop Innovative Ideas, and Design Effective Solutions, by Bella Martin, Bruce Hanington
Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers, by Alexander Osterwalder, Yves Pigneur
Co-creating and Co-thinking Landscape
6 main elements of innovation projects: culture, mindset, process, methods, space and facilitation.