Download - Design sprints - UX Book Club
![Page 1: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Wojciech Staszczyk&
Marcin Kinderman
![Page 2: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
![Page 3: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
![Page 4: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
![Page 5: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
http://www.gv.com/sprint/
![Page 6: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
https://medium.com/@makeshowlearn/personal-design-sprint-ii-food-tracking-af853a78a210#.ptwa1v8xw
![Page 7: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
https://sprintstories.com/design-sprints-not-just-for-startups-6ed7bce0f45d#.woslzgni2
![Page 8: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
https://dockyard.com/design-sprints/get-started/
![Page 9: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
![Page 10: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Examples of situations that invite a Design Sprint
● Are you launching a new product or a service?
● Are you extending an existing experience to a new
platform?
● Do you have an MVP but need an injection of UX / UI
Design?
● Are you considering adding new features and
functionality to your product?
● Does your product have opportunities for improvement
(e.g. a high rate of cart abandonment?)
● Do you want to empower your team and increase
sharing and collaboration?
![Page 11: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
The main deliverables after the Design sprint:
● Findings from the sprint (notes, user journey
maps, storyboards, information architecture
diagrams, etc.)
● Prototypes
● Report from the user testing with the findings
(backed by testing videos)
● A plan for next steps
![Page 12: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Before the sprint begins, you’ll need to
have the right challenge and the right
team. You’ll also need time and space
to conduct your sprint.
![Page 13: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Challenge
The bigger the challenge, the better the sprint.
![Page 14: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Three challenging situations where sprints can help:
● High Stakes
● Not Enough Time
● Just Plain Stuck
![Page 15: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Solve the surface first
![Page 16: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Team
![Page 17: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
DeciderWho makes decisions for your team? Perhaps it’s the CEO, or maybe it’s just the “CEO” of this
particular project. If she can’t join for the whole time, make sure she makes a couple of
appearances and delegates a Decider (or two) who can be in the room at all times.
Examples: CEO, founder, product manager, head of design
Finance expertWho can explain where the money comes from (and where it goes)?
Examples: CEO, CFO, business development manager
Marketing expertWho crafts your company’s messages?
Examples: CMO, marketer, PR, community manager
Team
![Page 18: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Customer expertWho regularly talks to your customers one-on-one?
Examples: researcher, sales, customer support
Tech/logistics expertWho best understands what your company can build and deliver?
Examples: CTO, engineer
Design expertWho designs the products your company makes?
Examples: designer, product manager”
Team
![Page 19: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
If your Decider is reluctant, try one or more of these arguments:
● Rapid Progress
● It’s an Experiment
● Explain the Tradeoffs*
● It’s About Focus
Team
![Page 20: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Bring the troublemaker*
Schedule extra experts for Monday
Pick a Facilitator
Team
![Page 21: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Time and Space
![Page 22: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Time and Space
![Page 23: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Time and Space
![Page 24: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Block five full days on the calendar
Time and Space
![Page 25: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
The no-device rule
In a sprint, time is precious, and we can’t afford distractions in the room. So we have a simple rule: No laptops, phones, or iPads allowed.
Time and Space
![Page 26: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Whiteboards make you smarter
“The simultaneous visibility of these project materials helps us identify patterns and encourages creative synthesis to occur much more readily than when these resources are hidden away in file folders, notebooks, or PowerPoint decks.”
- Tim Brown CEO of IDEO
Time and Space
![Page 27: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Stock up on the right supplies
Time and Space
● Lots of whiteboards
● Yellow sticky notes
● Black, green, red markers
● Black felt-tip pens
● Printer paper
● Masking tape
● Small/Large dot stickers
● Time timers
● Healthy snacks
![Page 28: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
https://medium.com/swlh/think-with-your-hands-36d703f60164#.44f2laggv
![Page 29: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Final prototype
![Page 30: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
![Page 31: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
User testing
![Page 32: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
![Page 33: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
![Page 35: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
“An organization can have design thinking as it’s macro
philosophy for value creation, use lean methodology to
execute operationally and get products out the gate, and
design sprints for specific challenges and problems as they
arise.”
![Page 36: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
“Design thinking is a formal method for practical, creative
resolution of problems and creation of solutions, with the
intent of an improved future result.” It’s also “a
human-centered, prototype-driven process for innovation
that can be applied to product, service, and business
design.”
![Page 37: Design sprints - UX Book Club](https://reader031.vdocuments.net/reader031/viewer/2022030300/5881260e1a28ab00438b4587/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Thank you for your attention
and please visit us on our fanpage
All materials are taken from the book“Sprint: How to Solve Big Problems and Test New Ideas in Just Five Days”