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Contextualising insights

These insights come from 15 remote interviews and a two-hour online workshop with design practitioners.

Our interview questions were very broad and we got a wide range of perspectives, but we do not know if these views are really representative of the community.

This is why we are now developing questionnaires to find convergences and divergences across the practitioners in the community. But individuals’ experiences and stories still offer relevant insights and reveal interesting debates.

The views in this summary are often of two to three people. We tried to make explicit when we include views expressed by only one person, or shared by many participants.

Although we speak of service design practice, we use the term service design very broadly.

When we refer to ‘practitioners’, we refer to people who engage in service design approaches and practice within the Scottish public and third sectors independently of their job title.

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Motivations for being a designer

All illustrations on this page were made by Angela

illustration of the concept of motivation - person with balloons

A lot of the motivations we heard were not specific to service design (SD), but more about design in a wider sense.

The design process involves people in a creative and emotional sense. Practitioners enjoy it for themselves but also as a way to engage people.They want to make things better by enabling others and working along with them, to make a positive difference in people’s lives: improve the places we live in, make Scotland more equal, build a better world.

Collaboration is seen as meaningful, preferable and enjoyable. Practitioners see design as more than just a job or a practice, it’s a mindset, almost a lifestyle.They do (service) design because they believe it works.

Solving problems is a key part of the design work as well as a key motivation for doing it.

There seems to be a perpetual learning about people and their behavioural patterns. Practitioners are curious and enjoy the continuous learning embedded in design.

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The skills to have

illustration of the concept of skills - person with

When we asked about the main skills to have, all the answers were around the way we can learn from people, engage them and take them on the journey with us.

Facilitation

Facilitation is seen as a fundamental skill to have and many were trying to learn to get better at it. Facilitating work covers organising workshops with people and taking them through a new creative process. It also involves all the preparation and material used to create the right energy for the people taking part. Facilitating can also be ‘encouraging or prompting’ people, providing elements to show what’s wrong so people make it right.

Storytelling

Storytelling for engagement is essential and practitioners are trying to get better at it and use different ways: text, images, metaphors or even using a theatrical method (using a structure, dramatic arches in everything you do to engage people). Some mentioned the power of a story, a lived experience.

Other important skills

Others skills mentioned were around building relationships, listening, engaging with people who are not familiar with SD, learning about the organisation, understanding the power and politics you are working with and then compromise and get the balance right between your vision and what you can achieve practically

Curating information

Curating information was mentioned as well. SD is a field which forces you to have a wide set of skills and learn from a lot of sources. Many practitioners have to deal with a lot of information during work hours (people in various roles but also things like slack, emails, workshops, research) but we heard the same thing about having too many sources to learn from outside work, between social media, events and books.

Soft skills, using patterns as an approach, craft making

There were other skills mentioned like soft skills (collaborating, working in a team) using patterns as an approach but also craft making: quite a few practitioners have a background in textile or jewellery for example.

“Craft learning gives you an approach to looking at the world in a very different way”

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How to improve and support

illustration of the concept of support

So how do we improve our practice?

Some of the things we are missing to support the SD practice mentioned by the practitioners:

“The set up of a project is a perfect time to open up and say what we are going to do together, it’s going to be hard, what can we put in place to support each other? How can we be safe?”

In terms of missing skills, various things were mentioned

If you are looking for a mentor or think you could be one, the website Mega Mentor could help you.

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How to learn and what to learn

illustration of the concept of learning

We mentioned earlier that continuous learning is part of the motivations for practitioners. They have a wide variety of ways to do this and often use more than one.

Some set themselves short term goals, one participant starts each project with the intention to do something different: tools to try out or a method.

Whatever way you learn, being able to apply this learning is really important:

“There is a risk that we can spend too much time doing things like formal training, without thinking how we are going to use that training or what [it] changes in our approach”

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Ways of learning

Being part of a community

[we will expand on this theme in a future post]

Other ways of learning we heard of:

Something a bit different "the community benefit clause"

Learning courses

One participant had experienced attending a service design course outside of formal education. The course they had taken felt like a big time commitment and a lot of the learning was actually not so much from the course itself but more from the reading around it. They also reflected that there was too much training offer for beginners and not enough for more advanced learning.

A growing demand for designers, do they need a master?

There is a growing demand for designers, a lot of people are arriving to SD through the same route: service design courses within universities after a couple of years.

Some think only experts can do SD and that you need years or experience and a master, but others think there is no need for a master and it’s more about ‘how you thing as a person’ and you can just ‘go and put yourself in a position of looking at how something got made and make it better’.

“Service design is not rocket science, it’s very instinctual stuff”

Design Education

Some think that design education is not good enough at the moment “we are expecting people to come out of SD courses within universities after a couple of years learning about design history and design as a process” to do the job.

One participant said that ‘in formal education, you’re taught how to stand up and give a presentation, you learn how to use your voice and how to use a powerpoint’. According to them, facilitation, which they viewed as a key skill, is not taught well enough.

“When students reach the workforce […] they need to learn how to behave within a wider team while it’s necessary for them to explain what their role is”

To improve students’ readiness to work, some suggested introducing learning about public sector hierarchies and structures and also to involve the industry to improve academia curriculum.

Even outside Service Design, there was a suggestion that design led approach to things should be part of the curriculum for all:

“That may not be your job, but it’s an approach about how you think about things”

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Learning needs / wants

It was very varied:

Some of these needs are illustrations of the lack of adequate training available in Design Education mentioned earlier:

Sharing

A big part of the way practitioners learn is by sharing. This is developped as part of the Community theme.


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