Category: Informed Design

Meeting Tools: A Look at What We Use and Share

Posted in Informed Design

As we worked to find out more about the origins of meetings in our History of Meetings research poster, we realized that though the reasons, and settings may have changed, the underlying way people met was pretty well consistent across the board. They come, they meet/discuss/brainstorm/share, they assign next steps, they leave (and repeat).

meeting-flow-graphic

Within this basic formula, it was usually the tool used to facilitate the meeting that provided the most insights about the meeting. The tool can reflect the culture, time period, social status, and any number of other things. From collaboration contraptions to time-keeping devices, from long-distance gadgets to simple note-taking utensils, we compiled the increasingly changing landscape of today’s meeting tools into groupings to better understand what’s out there.

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Meetings of the Past & Present

Posted in Informed Design

Always on the look out for visualizing interesting data, this time we turned our research-eye on meetings. How have they changed and progressed over the years? Was there a first ever meeting? When was it? What was it for? So many questions!

As we researched further and further back in time, our list of meetings continued to grow with dates, historical events and interesting places.

meeting-types

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Looking back on Communication Firsts

Posted in Informed Design

We’re often so caught up in our day-to-day activities that we hardly have the time to stop and consider how we are communicating and where our methods and devices come from. Here is a timeline of a few communication firsts, how they were used and, in some cases, the length of time it took to transmit the message in comparison to the distance the message could travel. Continue reading

I had 1052 check-ins, 144 points, 23 badges, 16 mayorships, and 12 friends when I quit FourSquare cold turkey (just in time for Thanksgiving)

Posted in Informed Design, Pivot Etc.

I was hooked — digitally addicted — to my location-based social networking mobile app. Everywhere I went, every store, school, cafe, building, restaurant, you name it, every place that I came close to, I had to FourSquare.

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Designer: Generalist or Experientialist?

Posted in Informed Design, Pivot Etc.

Designers are generalists.
This is a phrase I’ve heard (and used) over and over because it seems to be the most direct way to quickly describe the extensive gathering and learning, discovery process that we go through to understand our clients. Any given day we might find ourselves working on projects with clients from fields that are so diverse — like the corporate identity for a mining company in the morning and the design of a retail environment in the afternoon. Since we come in contact with so many different people, the only way to begin to understand each client and their project is to spend the time to learn about them and what they do. Continue reading

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