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Design for an Exploding World Find Your Meaning, Dig the Data & Adapt Page 1 © 2008 Razorfish. All rights reserved. AIGA “Small Talks, Big Ideas” – San Jose State University 10/22/2009 Razorfish -- Marisa Gallagher, VP User Experience

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"Design For An Exploding World" Presentation from the AIGA "Small Talks: Big Ideas" Lecture Series on October 22, 2009. http://aigasf.org/events/2009/10/22/small_talks_big_ideas_razorfish

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Page 1: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Design for an Exploding WorldFind Your Meaning, Dig the Data & Adapt

Page 1 © 2008 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

AIGA “Small Talks, Big Ideas” – San Jose State University

10/22/2009

Razorfish -- Marisa Gallagher, VP User Experience

Page 2: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

CHAOSThe designer's world has

entered a constant state of change.

Page 2 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 3: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009
Page 4: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009
Page 5: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 5 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 6: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 6 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 7: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Dealing with the Chaos:1. FIND – your meaning to the world

2. DIG – into the data to know more

3. ADAPT – get on with it and learn

Page 7 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 8: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

1. FIND (your meaning)Your brand means something, even

if your advertising doesn’t.

Page 8 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 9: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

What Does Your Brand Mean to Your Customer?

Questions to Ask:

What is its cultural significance?

Does it represent any archetype or icon?

Why do your customers like it, love it, fear it, hate it, use it?

What does it say about them – in what context do they use it?

What is its “shared shorthand”?

Page 9 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 10: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

First -- Go Broad

Explore the cultural archetypes and concepts related to a product category or larger industry. Create mood boards and word lists of what you find.

Then – Get Specific

Do a competitive audit of how others are using archetypes and cultural elements. Look for holes, gaps, and saturation points.

Page 10 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

How to Use The Questions?

Page 11: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 11 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Beverage Culture in Pictures . . .

Page 12: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 12 © 2008 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Beverage Culture in Words . . .

Page 13: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Coke: “Click-snap, Ahhhhhhhh.”Branding the sound of refreshment.

Competitive Audit

Page 14: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Snapple: “We found better stuff!”Purveyors of momentary, exotic

amusement and chance discovery.

Competitive Audit

Page 15: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Y water: a “new” concept in children’s beverages.

A magic potion is a special bottle to transform our kids and the industry.

Competitive Audit

Page 16: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

2. DIG (into the data)Become channel fluent.

Know how and where to reach your audience.

Page 16 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 17: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 17 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Old Media Is Maimed, Not Dead

Page 18: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Yet, Choose Your Channel Wisely

Mass + Passive

Channels

COMMUNICATION

Personal +

Interactive

Channels

PARTICIPATION

immersive storytelling

location specific

ritual, s

ocializing, familiarityconnected,

tailored,

dynamic

striking

play

Page 18 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 19: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Page 19 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Americans under 45 spend more time online than with other media

Internet

Know How To Reach Your Audience

Page 20: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Europeans over 25 like TV more than the Web, those over 45 like both radio and TV more than the Web

Page 20 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Internet

Another Good Starting Point . . .

Page 21: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

And Keep on Digging . . .

Page 21 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 22: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Qualitative Research Quantitative ResearchGood at: • Context, human texture, semantics,

subjectivity• Definitive conclusions, clear measures,

objectivity

Typical set-up: • Often in person, observation and discussion-oriented, even with task completion

• Often remote, test plan structured around clear objective responses without ambiguity (yes/no, multiple choice, success/failure)

Provides: • The why, why not, where not, when not • The what, how much, when, where

Downfall: • Directionality can be skewed by sample size, personalities

• Can be looking at the wrong measures.

Sample Size • 8-12 provide directionality/patterns • 100+ (technically 30, but numbers normalize better above 100)

Examples • Ethnographic studies• One-on-one interviews• Lab-style usability tests• Focus groups• Card sorting (in person)

• Mouse-and-click-path tracking• Multivariate testing• Self-directed remote usability testing• Analytics + search log tracking• Surveys• Card sorting (remote)

• Page 22 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

And Digging . . .

Page 23: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

3. ADAPT (and learn)Put it out there (and listen)

before it puts you out of business.

Page 23 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 24: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Get the Feedback Loop Going

Page 25: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Get Your Advocates Energized

Page 26: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Just Do It, Even if You’re Not Nike

Page 27: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Go Cheap: Don’t Build, Don’t Buy

Page 28: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Get Responsive Before It’s Too Late

Page 29: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Dealing with the Chaos:1. FIND – your meaning to the world

2. DIG – into the data to know more

3. ADAPT – get on with it and learn

Page 29 © 2009 Razorfish. All rights reserved.

Page 30: AIGA -- Design for An Exploding World -- Oct 22, 2009

Thank You

Razorfish

Marisa Gallagher, VP User Experience

[email protected]/marisagallagher

Page 30 © 2008 Razorfish. All rights reserved.