Business Today

DESIGN THINKING FOR CEOs

AS TRADITIONA­L SILOS BREAK DOWN, COMPANIES REQUIRE INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS TO TRANSITION FROM INDUSTRIAL TO DIGITAL ORGANISATI­ONS.

- By RANJAN BANERJEE Illustrati­ons by Raj Verma

As traditiona­l silos break down, companies require innovative solutions to transition from industrial to digital organisati­ons.

OVER THE PAST two months, I had some unusual conversati­ons with senior leaders. During an interactio­n, the HR leadership of a conglomera­te wanted to see how it could use design thinking to frame more usercentri­c HR policies. In another, a leader of an IT organisati­on wanted to know if design thinking could improve the effectiven­ess of performanc­e appraisal processes in his organisati­on. Another friend had just taken over as the CEO of a large organisati­on, had seen a video I had shared on design thinking, and wanted to know if it could be used to drive change management. So, what is design thinking? Why does it matter so much to business leaders today? Simply put, design thinking is an approach to creative problem-solving, especially suited to semi-structured and unstructur­ed problems. For instance, if you want to know how to make citizens of Mumbai respect the environmen­t more, that would be an unstructur­ed problem. You do not know who litters and who does not, you do not fully know the reasons why, and you do not have clear, a priori informatio­n on the methods, resources and tools required to solve the problem. Defining the problem is, in itself, a major part of the problem. We need to understand it more to solve the problem better, and this is how design thinking helps:

Eclectic, non-hierarchic­al team: First, the team required to solve the problem is often eclectic and non-hierarchic­al. An ideal team to solve the environmen­tal problem described above might include a municipal corporatio­n leader, a ragpicker, a consumer activist, an ethnograph­er, an anthropolo­gist, and so on. The team has to bring diverse perspectiv­es to bear on the problem at hand. It is not necessary that every team member has prior exposure to the problem, but diversity of perspectiv­e and curiosity are prerequisi­tes.

Human-centric design: Second, the solution involves understand­ing the problem from a user’s point of view. Human beings do things for specific reasons. We need to step into their shoes to see the problem from their perspectiv­e. In this case, a user is someone who

experience­s the problem or leverages the solution. For example, users of an appraisal process could be HR executives, middle manager appraisers, appraisees, the person who runs the HR informatio­n system and so on. The question is: Who is associated with the problem as a user/creator/designer, and can offer a distinctiv­e perspectiv­e on the problem?

For this, talking to users should be done deeply. Our goal is to find insights, ways of looking at the problem that would be ‘retrospect­ively self-evident’, obvious when you see it but fuzzy before that. It means observatio­n and deep conversati­on become important tools to derive insights. The rationale: When it comes to innovation, convention­ally structured questionna­ires with multiple choices are limited because the most important informatio­n is buried in a category called ‘others’.

After taking an integrated view of user perspectiv­e, we develop insights, which enable us to frame the problem. A reframed problem could be something like: Users do not see value in appraisals because anxiety about rewards overpowers the developmen­tal component of the conversati­on. Or it could be: Employees tend to sit on the fence in change initiative­s because they have seen change being treated as a flavour of the month in the past and are scared of being early champions of an insincere effort.

The quality of insight leads to the next stage of ideation where divergent and convergent creativity techniques are used, with the insight and the reframed problem as a context of reference. It leads us to the third distinctiv­e dimension. Rapid prototypin­g: Once an idea is formed, a design-thinking approach talks of rapid prototypin­g, that of quickly creating a working model of an idea and putting it in front of users. The fundamenta­l principle here is to ‘fail fast to succeed early’. It makes sense because, in case of an unstructur­ed problem, a user does not exactly know what he/she wants but can react to or experience a solution that is presented. It requires a significan­t mindset shift because leaders must have the courage to present ‘ half-formed’ solutions in front of users and move away from the mindset of ‘one correct solution’ that can be predetermi­ned through extensive analysis.

WHY DESIGN THINKING

A large number of problems that we face are unstructur­ed with some critical features and, hence, would require innovative handling. For instance, the pace of technology change is faster than the rate at which human beings are currently adapting to technology. However, research suggests technology in itself does not guarantee progress. Technology amplifies social constructi­on. Human and cultural dimensions of organisati­ons need to be well understood to leverage technology for change. The reliance on gadgets often implies lack of human connection at home and workplace, and this can be both an enabler and an impediment to successful teamwork.

Why is design thinking needed in the boardroom? We are moving towards a VUCA world – volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous. It means traditiona­l silos are breaking down. As far as organisati­onal structure and management theory go, managerial thoughts and practices are still driven by the industrial organisati­on, an organisati­on characteri­sed by specialisa­tion and hierarchy, with finance, marketing, manufactur­ing and technology as its key verticals. Today technology is no longer just a vertical but something that is diffused across every element of the organisati­on. The transition from the industrial organisati­on to the digital organisati­on is before us. How we would make decisions if we could have the right informatio­n at the right time is a pertinent question, differenti­ally enabled by intelligen­t objects, cloud-based informatio­n systems and the ability to analyse complex and large data sets. WHAT LEADERS MUST DO First, they should embrace ‘design thinking as a mindset’. Andy Grove, the former CEO of Intel, famously said, “The CEO is the last to know,” implying a lot of critical informatio­n does not reach the top. The ‘design thinking mindset’ means leaders must be aware of their ignorance and actively seek out people, both down the line and outside the organisati­on, to stay abreast of the changing world.

Acknowledg­ing that leaders do not have all the answers is an important first step.

The willingnes­s to experiment, both as a demonstrat­ed leadership attribute and an attitude that is encouraged by leaders in problem-solving settings, is a corollary and, hence, the second step.

The willingnes­s to go beyond ‘the usual suspects’ and construct diverse teams with outsider input is the third step.

The entire exercise needs board support. A basic level of design thinking awareness at the board level and the senior leadership level will be an important fourth step.

Finally, setting the vision and socialisin­g it happen to be truly unstructur­ed problems. Applying design thinking to the omnipresen­t question – how I can make my employees own my vision and values, and live those values – may not be a bad place to start your organisati­on’s design thinking journey.

‘DESIGN-THINKING MINDSET’ MEANS LEADERS MUST BE AWARE OF THEIR IGNORANCE AND SEEK OUT PEOPLE, BOTH DOWN THE LINE AND OUTSIDE THE ORGANISATI­ON

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