The secret to strategic design: Mastering planning
In response to a managers question about how to plan products, Alan Kay famously remarked, The best way to predict the future is to invent it. His answer invokes a paradox at the heart of design: we cant know the future, yet its what we design for. Peter Morville argues that to practice strategic design amid disruptive innovation, we must get better at planning.
Talk Title | The secret to strategic design: Mastering planning |
Speakers | Peter Morville (Semantic Studios) |
Conference | O’Reilly Design Conference |
Conf Tag | Design the Future |
Location | San Francisco, California |
Date | March 20-22, 2017 |
URL | Talk Page |
Slides | Talk Slides |
Video | |
In response to a manager’s question about how to plan products, Alan Kay famously remarked, “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” His answer invokes a paradox at the heart of design: we can’t know the future, yet it’s what we design for. Peter Morville argues that to practice strategic design successfully in an era of rapid change, connected ecosystems, and disruptive innovation, we must get better at planning. To start, we must let go of “the plan” and embrace a dynamic way of planning that’s social, tangible, agile, and reflective. We must engage our colleagues in business and technology to align use cases, prototypes, and roadmaps with culture, governance, and process. To design sustainable products, services, and experiences, we must also design the context. As we struggle to make sense of self-driving cars, conversational interfaces, machine learning, and the internet of things, it’s never been more vital to think expansively about how we might organize the future. Fortunately, since planning is a skill, we can improve. Peter explains how to get better at planning and strategic design by making planning visible.