Design Thinking & Innovation | Updated With Chatgpt

Posted By: ELK1nG

Design Thinking & Innovation | Updated With Chatgpt
Last updated 4/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 971.57 MB | Duration: 3h 30m

Assess your organization's readiness & maturity for innovation | 6 case studies | ChatGPT & Prompt Engineering

What you'll learn

You will understand how they can pursue an innovation journey or how to develop a new product or service using the design thinking framework.

You will understand that Design Thinking is an approach used for practical and creative problem-solving.

You will learn that Design Thinking is extremely user-centric, It focuses on humans first and foremost, seeking to understand people’s needs

Empathy provides the critical starting point for Design Thinking

You’ll gather all of your findings from the empathise phase and start to make sense of them: what difficulties and barriers are your users coming up against?

You will learn that the third phase in the Design Thinking process is where the creativity happens, and the ideation stage is a judgement-free zone!

You will get clarity that the fourth step is key in putting each solution to the test and highlighting any constraints and flaws

You will understand that the results of the testing phase will often lead you back to a previous step, providing the insights you need to redefine

Requirements

None

Description

Recent Updates:Jan 2023: Updated the course with ChatGPT and Prompt Engineering topics relevant for design thinking and innovationJuly 2022: Gestalt principles are very relevant for design and innovation. Detailed video session covering the seven principles along with examples have been added.What is Design Thinking?Design Thinking is an approach used for practical and creative problem-solving. It is based heavily on the methods and processes that designers use (hence the name), but it has actually evolved from a range of different fields — including architecture, engineering and business. Design Thinking can also be applied to any field; it doesn’t necessarily have to be design-specific.Design Thinking is extremely user-centric. It focuses on humans first and foremost, seeking to understand people’s needs and come up with effective solutions to meet those needs. It is what we call a solution-based approach to problem-solving.What is the purpose of Design Thinking?Now we know more about how Design Thinking works, let’s consider why it matters. There are many benefits of using a Design Thinking approach — be it in a business, educational, personal or social context.First and foremost, Design Thinking fosters creativity and innovation. As human beings, we rely on the knowledge and experiences we have accumulated to inform our actions. We form patterns and habits that, while useful in certain situations, can limit our view of things when it comes to problem-solving. Rather than repeating the same tried-and-tested methods, Design Thinking encourages us to remove our blinkers and consider alternative solutions. The entire process lends itself to challenging assumptions and exploring new pathways and ideas.Design Thinking is often cited as the healthy middle ground of problem-solving — it is not steeped wholly in emotion and intuition, nor does it rely solely on analytics, science and rationale; it uses a mixture of both.Another great benefit of Design Thinking is that it puts humans first. By focusing so heavily on empathy, it encourages businesses and organizations to consider the real people who use their products and services — meaning they are much more likely to hit the mark when it comes to creating meaningful user experiences. For the user, this means better, more useful products that actually improve our lives. For businesses, this means happy customers and a healthier bottom line.Design Thinking is both an ideology and a process, concerned with solving complex problems in a highly user-centric way. In this course, we’ll give you a detailed definition of Design Thinking, illustrate exactly what the process involves, and underline why it matters: What is the value of Design Thinking, and in what contexts is it particularly useful? We’ll also analyze the relationship between User Experience Design and Design Thinking.We also cover in this course how an individual or an organization can innovate and design products or service using the 5 step design thinking methodology.

Overview

Section 1: Introduction

Lecture 1 Introduction

Section 2: Understanding Innovation

Lecture 2 Understanding Innovation

Section 3: Design Thinking Maturity

Lecture 3 Design Thinking Maturity

Section 4: Five Phases in Design Thinking

Lecture 4 Five Phases in Design Thinking

Section 5: Empathize and Re-Frame

Lecture 5 Empathize and Re-Frame

Section 6: Ideating

Lecture 6 Ideating

Section 7: Prototype and Test

Lecture 7 Prototype and Test

Section 8: Case Study 1: App is not the product

Lecture 8 Case Study 1: App is not the product

Section 9: Case Study 2: Power of Reframe

Lecture 9 Case Study 2: Power of Reframe

Section 10: Case Study 3: Know your Customers

Lecture 10 Case Study 3: Know your Customers

Section 11: Case Study 4: Empathize to understand customers better

Lecture 11 Case Study 4: Empathize to understand customers better

Section 12: Case Study 5: Being In the shoes of the customer

Lecture 12 Case Study 5: Being In the shoes of the customer

Section 13: Case Study 6: Design Thinking for your personal life

Lecture 13 Case Study 6: Design Thinking for your personal life

Section 14: Gestalt's Principles

Lecture 14 Gestalt's Principles

Section 15: ChatGPT and Prompt Engineering For Design Thinking & Innovation

Lecture 15 All About ChatGPT

Lecture 16 ChatGPT for Elevator Speech

Lecture 17 Prompt Engineering

Lecture 18 ChatGPT for Design and Innovation

Lecture 19 Eight types of prompts for product design and strategy

Lecture 20 Did you notice?

Product Managers, UI/UX Designers, Innovation Managers, Improvement Managers, Students, Senior Management