Designing for Dollars
Essay by JAGO • July 24, 2013 • Essay • 9,709 Words (39 Pages) • 3,512 Views
Designing for Dollars
Great product design is absolutely critical for most consumer products companies. But how do these companies know when a design feature will pay off. Especially when every dollar counts? How do they make these tough decisions? That's the challenge that faced Whirlpool's chief designed. Chuck Jones, He knew he had to come up with a better way.
Chuck's realization that the whole process of making design decisions needed to be improved came after meeting with Whirlpool's resource allocation team. Chuck wanted to add some ornamentation to a Kitchen Aid refrigerator that was being redesigned, but it would have added about $5 in extra cost. When the team asked him to estimate the return on investment (that is, would it pay off financially to add this cost?), he couldn't gibe them any data. His "trust me, I'm a designer" argument didn't sway them either. Chuck resolved to improve the approach to investing in design.
His first step was to survey other. "design-centric" companies, including BMW, Nike, and Nokia, Surprisingly, only a few had a system for forecasting return on design. Most of them simply based future investments on past performance. Chuck said, "No one had really figured this stuff out. With so many smart, talented people on the field, why had no one been able to come up two accounting professors, one reason is that it's incredibly difficult to discern design's contribution from all the other business functions (marketing, manufacturing, distribution, etc.). And even the design profession couldn't agree on how to approach this problem. Despite the obstacles, Chuck continued his quest to find a way to objectively measure the benefits of design.
What he eventually concluded was that a focus on bottom-line returns. If his team could objectively measure what customers want in a product and then meet those needs, the company could realize financial returns. Chuck's design team created a standardized company wide process that puts design prototypes in front of customer focus groups and then gets detailed measurements of their preferences about aesthetics, craftsmanship, technical performance, ergonomic, and usability. They chart the *** against competing products and the company's own products. The *** based approach gives *** *** * *** of objective evidence from which to make investment decisions. Design investment decisions are now based on fact, not opinion. The "new" decision-making approach has transformed the company's culture and led to bolder designs because the designers can now make a strong case for making those investments.
Discussion Questions
1. Would you characterize product design decisions as structured or unstructured problems?
2. Describe and evaluate the process Chuck went through to change the way design decisions were made. Describe and evaluate the company's new design decision process.
3. What criteria does Whirlpool's design team use in design decisions? What do you think each of these criteria involves?Designing for Dollars
Great product design is absolutely critical for most consumer products companies. But how do these companies know when a design feature will pay off. Especially when every dollar counts? How do they make these tough decisions? That's the challenge that faced Whirlpool's chief designed. Chuck Jones, He knew he had to come up with a better way.
Chuck's realization that the whole process of making design decisions needed to be improved came after meeting with Whirlpool's resource allocation team. Chuck wanted to add some ornamentation to a Kitchen Aid refrigerator that was being redesigned, but it would have added about $5 in extra cost. When the team asked him to estimate the return on investment (that is, would it pay off financially to add this cost?), he couldn't gibe them any data. His "trust me, I'm a designer" argument didn't sway them either. Chuck resolved to improve the approach to investing in design.
His first step was to survey other. "design-centric" companies, including BMW, Nike, and Nokia, Surprisingly, only a few had a system for forecasting return on design. Most of them simply based future investments on past performance. Chuck said, "No one had really figured this stuff out. With so many smart, talented people on the field, why had no one been able to come up two accounting professors, one reason is that it's incredibly difficult to discern design's contribution from all the other business functions (marketing, manufacturing, distribution, etc.). And even the design profession couldn't agree on how to approach this problem. Despite the obstacles, Chuck continued his quest to find a way to objectively measure the benefits of design.
What he eventually concluded was that a focus on bottom-line returns. If his team could objectively measure what customers want in a product and then meet those needs, the company could realize financial returns. Chuck's design team created a standardized company wide process that puts design prototypes in front of customer focus groups and then gets detailed measurements of their preferences about aesthetics, craftsmanship, technical performance, ergonomic, and usability. They chart the *** against competing products and the company's own products. The *** based approach gives *** *** * *** of objective evidence from which to make investment decisions. Design investment decisions are now based on fact, not opinion. The "new" decision-making approach has transformed the company's culture and led to bolder designs because the designers can now make a strong case for making those investments.
Discussion Questions
1. Would you characterize product design decisions as structured or unstructured problems?
2. Describe and evaluate the process Chuck went through to change the way design decisions were made. Describe and evaluate the company's new design decision process.
3. What criteria does Whirlpool's design team use in design decisions? What do you think each of these criteria involves?Designing for Dollars
Great product design is absolutely critical for most consumer products companies. But how do these companies know when a design feature will pay off. Especially when every dollar counts? How do they make these tough decisions? That's the challenge that faced Whirlpool's chief designed. Chuck Jones, He knew he had to come up with a better way.
Chuck's realization that the whole process
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