This book stitches together a complete design journey from beginning to end in a way that you’ve likely never seen before.
Whether you’re designing a new Value Proposition, Business Model, or even an entire strategy for the future, design criteria form the principles and benchmarks of the change you’re after. Design criteria are not formulated from thin air. Rather, design criteria incorporate information from your business, vision, customer research, cultural and economic context, and mindset that you have formed along the way.
Time | ± 45 minutes |
Difficulty | 3 / 5 |
People | 3 - 5 |
Author | Design A Better Business |
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Don’t think of these criteria as simply features of your idea. They can and should be more than that. For example, a design criteria coming from your vision might be that your business must contribute to a greener planet. Or, maybe you want your customers to feel delighted; this is another design criterion. Does your new business idea need to generate a certain amount of revenue within three years? Chalk that up to more design criteria. In short, design criteria are there to make it easy to determine if you are on the right track.
The design criteria you capture will likely first come from the vision you’ve formulated with your team. You’ll fi nd that some of the elements in that vision are so important that they are non-negotiable. Yes, that also means that some elements are a bit more flexible (maybe not totally flexible). To fi nd the most important elements in your vision, use the “MoSCoW” method: categorize every element under “Must,” “Should,” “Could,” or “Won’t.” This will help you prioritize.
Once you’ve started this exercise, you might find that you need to adjust your vision slightly. This may prompt you to take a different direction. If that’s the case, adjust the design criteria so that they match the new direction. As you continue to evolve your point of view, you may need to add or update your design criteria.
Arrange for a comfortable environment. Definitely not a meeting room.
Have team members go over their own reasons for being in this project as well as the vision and ideas you have about it.
Have team-members come up with design criteria individually first, by writing them on sticky note. Sources for design criteria can be: your vision canvas, things you learned when speaking to your (potential) customers, and validation outcomes. Besides those aspirative ideas, there are usually also some constraints to take into account: deliver a certain revenue, fit with a certain infrastructure, time limits, budgets, etc. Make sure to capture all of them.
Tip! Try to make your criteria as clear as possible, so that you and others will still understand what they mean in three months time. Split up more complex design criteria.
When each team member has a pile of design criteria, take turns to stick them on the canvas. Stick them where you think they should go first, we'll organize them later. Have team members say why they think it is a design criterium and why it should be in the box they put it in. If you find duplicates just stick them on top of eachother.When everything is on the board, take a step back. Have a short break. Did you miss anything? Forget something?
Example Check out this awesome example which is an External Link
Now, with the team, go over each sticky note and see what are the real non-negotiables. Be strict in this, nice to haves are nice to haves, nothing more! If you get stuck, try to compare sticky notes in the same box and see which ones are the least important. What if you did not meet that criterium? If that does not mean total failure, it's not a non-negotiable.
Tip! Organizing on a canvas usually means clustering and removing things. Things that are not really important should be removed! if you want to keep them for later, have a parking lot.
Go over the Design Criteria, and make them S.M.A.R.T. (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound). If necessary, replace the post-its with better defined ones. Keep a note of the SMART Design Critera.
Regularly revisit your design criteria, both as a touchstone for ideas and directions, and to see if they need to be updated because your point of view became more informed.
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