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Behavioral science should start by assuming people are reasonable - ScienceDirect
DesignKit Online: Online Designing Tool | Free Download
100+ open source innovation tools from the greatest design & strategy agencies in the world. Ideal for both offline or online workshops. All tools are pixel perfectly packaged in a vectorized PDF or PNG and can be downloaded for free.
Using Thinking Styles to Look Beyond the “Average User” with Indi Young
But she did explain how researching and designing for the majority or “average user” actually end up ignoring, othering, and harming the people our designs are meant to serve. Indi shared how she finds patterns in people’s behaviors, thoughts, and needs—and how she uses that data to create thinking styles that inform more inclusive design decisions. Indi talked about… Why researchers should look for patterns, not anecdotes, to understand real user needs. What are thinking styles and how to uncover and use them. Why your “average” user often doesn’t exist in the real world, and how we can do better.
Jobs to be Done Insights Canvas
Systems Mapping: How to build and use causal models of systems
Utilizing a Positive Deviance Approach to Reduce Girls’ Trafficking in Indonesia: Asset-based Communicative Acts That Make a Difference - Lucía Durá, Arvind Singhal, 2009
A Psychological Approach to Journey Mapping
Decarbonising Existing Homes in Wales: A Participatory Behavioural Systems Mapping Approach – UCL Press
Method:Three participatory workshops were held with the independent Welsh residential decarbonisation advisory group(‘the Advisory Group’)to (1)maprelationships betweenactors, behavioursand influences onbehaviourwithin thehome retrofitsystem,(2)provide training in the Behaviour Change Wheel framework(3)use these to developpolicy recommendationsfor interventions. Recommendations were analysed usingthe COM-B (capability, opportunity, motivation) model of behaviourtoassesswhether they addressed these factors. Results:Twobehavioural systems mapswere produced,representing privately rented and owner-occupied housing tenures. The main causal pathways and feedback loops in each map are described.
COM-B + Experience Mapping: A Design Thinking Love Story | by Jen Briselli | Aug, 2021 | Bootcamp
In their maturity, the fields of experience strategy and behavior change design are moving past the casual flirtations of two complementary knowledge domains into a full fledged partnership: when we marry the design of behavioral interventions and the design of experiences, there’s a special power in combining the myriad frameworks from both domains. This becomes especially effective when the goal is not just to identify pain points in an existing experience journey or illustrate an ideal future one — but to make actionable recommendations that will help clients make the leap from actual to ideal.
The GV research sprint: a 4-day process for answering important startup questions
The Remote Design Sprint Guide — The Design Sprint
Designing for Behavior Change: A Practical Field Guide - USAID
The Customer-Centered Innovation Map
original “jobs to be done“ article from 2008
“How to Map a Customer Job” – Anthony Ulwick
So how is it done? We’ve found that all jobs have the same eight steps. To use job mapping, we look for opportunities to help customers at every step:
Challenge Mapping Part 1 - Challenge Map Basics — 7 League Studio
There are a few enormous benefits to using challenge maps. First, challenge maps help teams surface the key decision points that will have the greatest potential impact, both for users and the business. Challenge maps also help teams get aligned and on the same page about the most impactful next step. Finally, and maybe most importantly, challenge maps help teams see where their thinking has been too limited, inspire fresh thinking, and unlock innovation.