Abstract
As the service sector within the global economy is growing at a rapid pace; design is called upon by the economy; society and culture to help address complex problems and build bridges between previously separate disciplines. Large organisations struggle to deliver new services that address complex problems; but do not fit into their organisational models. Designers are asked to expand their traditional roles; and also address complex organisational re-structuring. In order to play these more strategic roles; designers however need be involved at the start of an innovation process and not – as is now the often the case – only towards the end. Using a ‘thinking through making’ approach the CRISP PSS 101 project introduces tools that facilitate the alignment of expectations and address the importance of trust and meaning within networks producing Product Service Systems.
Keywords
Wicked Problems; Thinking through making; Intuitive explorations; Service innovations; Service design; Co-Design; Value Creation; Product Service Systems
DOI
https://doi.org/10.21606/servdes2014.24
Citation
Rygh, K., Arets, D.,and Raijmakers, B.(2014) Defining Values through Collaboration, in Sangiorgi, D., Hands, D., & Murphy, E. (eds.), ServDes 2014: Service Future, 9–11 April, Lancaster, United Kingdom. https://doi.org/10.21606/servdes2014.24
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Conference Track
Research Papers
Defining Values through Collaboration
As the service sector within the global economy is growing at a rapid pace; design is called upon by the economy; society and culture to help address complex problems and build bridges between previously separate disciplines. Large organisations struggle to deliver new services that address complex problems; but do not fit into their organisational models. Designers are asked to expand their traditional roles; and also address complex organisational re-structuring. In order to play these more strategic roles; designers however need be involved at the start of an innovation process and not – as is now the often the case – only towards the end. Using a ‘thinking through making’ approach the CRISP PSS 101 project introduces tools that facilitate the alignment of expectations and address the importance of trust and meaning within networks producing Product Service Systems.