Rank #85

The Double Diamond Design Process

The Double Diamond Design Process is a creative problem-solving framework used by designers to develop innovative solutions to complex problems. It is based on the idea that the process of design should be iterative and non-linear, allowing for exploration and experimentation. The process consists of four distinct phases:

From Wikipedia

Double Diamond is a design process model popularized by the British Design Council in 2005. The process was adapted from the divergence-convergence model proposed in 1996 by Hungarian-American linguist Béla H. Bánáthy. The two diamonds represent a process of exploring an issue more widely or deeply and then taking focused action . It suggests that, as a design method, the design process should have four phases:Discover: Understand the issue, rather than assuming its nature: speak to and spend time with people who are affected by the issue, to find out which problems are common among users. It is critical to start from the issue you aim to address, and not from the solution you wish to use. Define: With insight gathered from the discovery phase, distill the information, identify chains of cause-and-effect, and define the problem. This requires both differentiating and synthesizing the challenges faced by many users, to outline the problem space and appreciate its complexity. Develop: Come up with different solutions to the clearly defined problem, seeking inspiration from elsewhere and co-designing with a range of different people and specialties. Approaching a problem with a variety of strategies accesses creative solutions which may not be apparent to those experienced in one particular field. Deliver: Test different solutions at a small scale, and iterate and improve the solutions which address users' needs. Reject solutions that do not work, or cannot scale up to practical application.

Read on Wikipedia ↗

01
Lv 1 · Browser0 pts
0 / 100 to Lv 2+1 / 200px scrolled
Theme
Display
Density