0%

Book Description

Companies and their customers today often don’t focus on the same things. While a restaurant may work hard to create an exciting new menu item, diners care more about courtesy. A bank will spend thousands promoting trust while customers struggle to access their website. This report explains how service design can help your organization innovate to deliver great experiences, not just great products, by understanding your customers' needs.

Service design experts Adam Lawrence, Marc Stickdorn, Markus Hormeß, and Jakob Schneider explain that service design is a mindset, a process, a toolset, and a cross-disciplinary language. You’ll learn how cross-functional teams can create and orchestrate great customer or employee experiences that satisfy the requirements of the business, the user, and other stakeholders.

This report explores how:

  • Service design applies to physical and digital products as well as services
  • Today’s informed customers have created a new challenge for businesses
  • Service design is similar to design thinking and compatible with Agile and Lean
  • Designers can promote low-risk progress through iterative prototyping
  • Lightweight, iterative research can keep teams from solving the wrong problem
  • This approach offers a common language for cross-silo collaboration

Table of Contents

  1. What Is Service Design?
    1. Executive Summary
    2. Example Boxes
  2. 1. Why Service Design?
    1. The Challenges for Organizations
      1. Customers and Organizations Don’t Focus on the Same Things
      2. Empowered Customers
      3. Silos
      4. The Need for Innovation
      5. Metrics Are Only Part of the Answer
    2. Origins and Progress
    3. In Conclusion
  3. 2. What Is Service Design?
    1. What Service Design Isn’t
    2. Defining Service Design
      1. Different Views
    3. The Core Activities of Service Design
      1. Types of Activities
      2. Workflow
    4. Applications and Cases
    5. In Conclusion
  4. 3. The Impact on Organizations
    1. The Difficult Changes
  5. 4. Summary: The Principles of Service Design
    1. In Conclusion
  6. A. The 12 Commandments of Service Design Doing
54.166.223.204