Design Thinking Approach
Student’s Name
Course
Institution Affiliation
Deep Thinking Approach
Dunne (2018) states that design thinking is a human-centered approach to creativity, anchored to understand customers’ needs and generate innovative and creative ideas. These ideas would transform the development of services, products, organizations, and processes. Through the design thinking approach, decisions made are based on the actual needs instead of making risky bets or relying on historical data. Mostly, this approach is used to tackle ill-defined problems and involves five phases. Stage one, empathize, involves an empathetic comprehension of the problem needed to be solved. Stage two, define, requires one to accumulate gathered information and analyze observations to define the core problems. At stage three of ideate, one searches for alternative ways of looking at a problem and tests at the prototype stage for the best solution. Finally, at the test stage, one revisits previous stages to look for alternative solutions. This paper discusses the working environment benefits from the design thinking approach.
In a working environment, the design thinking approach encourages creative problem solving and thinking by allowing an employee to look at a problem from a broader perspective. This is because the approach involves extensive formulation and brainstorming of ideas that expand an employee’s knowledge. Moreover, design thinking encourages employees to collaborate to create meaningful input and receive positive feedback, thereby creating invaluable experiences for customers. Even when the idea has not been put into implementation, the design thinking process creates an environment that allows the employee to exercise creativity. Innovation and creativity increase the effectiveness of an employer in encountering daily problems and become more efficient in tending to customers’ needs.
Design thinking enables employees to expand their knowledge, thereby increasing their working capabilities continuously. This is because the design thinking approach incorporates a great number of evaluations and feedback. Even after finding a solution to a problem, the design thinking approach requires an employee to search for alternative solutions that would have solved the problem better. The employee also continues to conduct measurements on the results to ensure that the customers or clients experience what they intend to provide. By doing so, they develop the ability to improve their comprehension of their target customers and clients continuously. As a result, they develop the ability to determine the tools and activities to be used. Moreover, they use feedback data to identify the weak areas in their strategy, hence finding ways of creating improvements.
The design thinking approach allows business people to make decisions based on the needs and preferences of customers. This approach consists of five stages: empathize, define, ideate, prototype, and test. Furthermore, the Design thing approach encourages creative problem solving and thinking in a working environment. Employees get subjected to brainstorming and immense thinking to develop meaningful ideas. These practices increase employees’ effectiveness to tackle and solve day-to-day problems and tend to customers efficiently. Also, design thinking enables employees to expand their knowledge, which motivates them to conduct work efficiently. Generally, design thinking encourages employees to develop their creative skills and continuously expand their working environment knowledge.
References
Dunne, D. (2018). Implementing design thinking in organizations: an exploratory study. Journal of Organization Design, 7(16), 1-16.
Foster, M. K. (2019). Design thinking: A creative approach to problem-solving. Management Teaching Review, 1(1), 1-34.