Jo Wong – UX Mastery https://uxmastery.com The online learning community for human-centred designers Wed, 22 Jul 2020 02:06:50 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://uxmastery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-uxmastery_logotype_135deg-100x100.png Jo Wong – UX Mastery https://uxmastery.com 32 32 170411715 Towards a Manifesto for Making Meaningful Work https://uxmastery.com/manifesto-for-making-meaningful-work/ https://uxmastery.com/manifesto-for-making-meaningful-work/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2017 23:00:30 +0000 http://uxmastery.com/?p=49969 How can we create more meaning in our everyday work? How can we make routines to contribute to the intention of wellness for people, work, projects, communities and economies for an enlightened future society? Dan Szuc and Josephine Wong introduce seven practices we can use right away to start exploring our responses.

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How can we create more meaning in our everyday work?

How can we make routines to contribute to the intention of wellness for people, work, projects, communities and economies for an enlightened future society? Try following these practice cards, for a start.

1. Positivity – create flow instead of a negative first approach

“Businesses are often conservative by nature and avoid taking risks. But the world needs big thinkers and big dreamers—people who are willing to look beyond the day-to-day operations and current constraints and look for ways to inspire.”

Practice: List 5 positives in a situation to discuss with others.

2. Listening and learning – actively listen first and be present before sharing your opinions

“Forming a relationship with a person means viewing that person as an equal: a human being who can contribute actively to these conversations.”

Practice: Listen before speaking to better understand the other person first and remember that you have two ears to practice with.

3. Biases – be explicitly aware of your own biases

“In identifying assumptions, a team takes a pause from their work to reflect on the evidence they’ve gathered, the approaches they’ve taken, the experiments the project has generated, and the team’s own reasoning to identify their biases and open their minds to external criticism.”

Practice: List 5 assumption or fears to challenge and discuss with others.

4. Define the problem – understand the problem to be solved before proposing solutions

“In defining our intentions, team members take the time to interact with one another and their stakeholders and share existing knowledge. They develop a plan and agree upon a project’s focus, exploring how it will determine the quality of project outcomes.”

Practice: List out 5 attributes of a problem and then list out a contributor to each attribute.

5. Magic in the nuance – deconstruct extreme statements and look for the useful nuances

“When sharing observations, a team comes together to read stories about people’s behavior and record them in the team’s collective memory. This routine enables a team to identify surprising or deeply memorable situations that deserve further analysis by the whole team.”

Practice: Take an extreme statement and list 5 questions you would like answers to.

6. Commonalities before differences – find common connections between people, roles and teams

“When people experience positive emotions, there may be opportunities to bridge them quickly to another positive moment and link up to this goodness through design. If people experience negative emotions, there may be opportunities to devise techniques to address them. We need to be able to assess people’s feelings, from moment to moment, and to understand the approaches that get the best from the people around us.”

Practice: Introduce yourself to a person in another team and learn more about what their job entails.

7. Continuous life learning – seek out incremental improvement instead of massive change

“To that end, we need to get out of our cubicles, get out of the building, and learn how our products and services fit into real people’s lives. To communicate our understanding of human needs, we need to capture rich stories in the voice of the customer, as well as photos and videos. We must encourage businesses to foster constant curiosity about how they can serve people better.”

Practice: Read 1 article per week and share what you’ve learned with others.

 

This article was originally published for UXmas – an advent calendar for UX folk. Catch up on all 24 posts at uxmas.com.

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The Harmony of Teams: A considered approach to making meaningful work collaboratively https://uxmastery.com/harmony-of-teams-a-considered-approach-to-making-meaningful-work-collaboratively/ https://uxmastery.com/harmony-of-teams-a-considered-approach-to-making-meaningful-work-collaboratively/#respond Thu, 01 Sep 2016 01:07:33 +0000 http://uxmastery.com/?p=43787 What are the elements of a project we should be thinking about to help bring people together to make meaningful things as a team? What does making meaningful work mean to you? Dan Szuc and Josephine Wong share their hard-won insights on creating a more harmonious work environment, but may leave you with more questions than answers.

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At the end of 2012 Jo and I were professionally stuck. We were faced with a stark question about Apogee’s consulting work and the direction of the business going forward; What if UX was not really our intention in the work that we do?

It was a hard question to answer. We had invested so much time and energy into the way we do things, and we were finding it hard to slow down and seek alternative directions.

So we took a trip to Chengdu, mainland China, with our friends and advisors Bas and Geke from STBY. It was a deliberate space to enjoy relaxed conversations about our work, vent our shared frustrations, connect related topics and perspectives from thinking outside the field of design, and to touch on our toolkits and where we thought our practice was going.

Project inspection and flow

The natural flow of our conversations allowed us to share stories, reflect on and make sense of what our new thinking meant for our respective practices, and to better understand how each of us wanted to help our clients, now and in the future, with meaningful work.

We began to move away from our habitual ways of looking at our work and let go of the language that we had been using. 

We gave ourselves permission to pursue the freedom of thought that would enable us to see things anew.

We started talking about how teams work together. In our experience, the good energies a team brings to a new project can quickly get derailed if people don’t feel they have a clear understanding of why they’re working on something.

Opinion wars escalate when there is no customer involvement that could let us better understand their needs—both now and over time.

What’s the best way teams can create meaningful work together?

Teams create additional features to support their own egos and opinions, without grounding their justification in evidence of what customers actually need. Sometimes, during a project, people create conflicts that serve only to get in the way of making meaningful work together.

Unnecessary and petty battles suck the fun out of work and prevent it from being productive.

Why do people create this conflict?

You’ve probably experienced at least one of these scenarios in a project you’ve been part of:

  • The team did not collect, or clearly understand, the requirements
  • The team did not properly define the core of the offering
  • There was too much distance between the customer and the project goals
  • The organisation had already invested too much in the project to allow it to fail
  • The team simply did not know how to get along.

These factors all contribute to creating an environment of fear and uncertainty that prevents people from working together to create wonderful products and services.

So, what are the elements of a project we need to be thinking about to help bring people together to make meaningful things as a team?

1. Define the core of what you make

It’s important for everyone on a team—independent of their discipline—to have a clear idea of the core features and value proposition of the product or service they’re creating.

What is the primary reason a customer would want to buy, rent, or subscribe to a product or service? How would customers go about completing their goals? How could a product or service better serve customers and the business over time?

2. Inform design through customer stories, and engage in sense-making with your team

Create a regular routine for learning about and understanding your customers so your team can make sense of customer insights together.

Transforming customer stories into valuable, accurate information, and using sense-making techniques, enables a team to engage in well-informed product or service design rather than relying on random, inaccurate assumptions.

Staying close to your customers, rather than making assumptions, keeps your project on track.

You could do this through asking questions, looking at data through the lenses of various disciplines, and having multidisciplinary conversations. Collecting this data helps you to map product and service features and solutions to customers’ actual needs and desires.

3. Share observations in a shared context

Don’t underestimate the importance of sharing, as a group, your individual and collective observations about customer and stakeholder behaviours. This enables teams to identify surprising or deeply memorable situations that deserve further analysis.

Sharing stories with other team members and groups makes way for a broader interpretation of the stories, which can help to make sense of everyone’s observations and determine what artefacts would give their observations and insights life.

Once your team develops a routine for sharing these stories, you can start to list assumptions, discuss the sources and the evidence available to support them. You can then either challenge or accept particular assumptions, or sets of assumptions, depending on the insights gained from sharing customer observations. As a team, this helps to prioritise particular features by determining those that deserve more of the team’s time, focus, and attention, and identifying which features require more research or further design iterations.

Using customer data to inform design decisions through sense-making is not a one-off activity. Nor is it just the responsibility of the user researcher or UX lead. It should be a constant activity that is integral to conducting business. Without this kind of research and sense-making, a business simply won’t be able to innovate over time.

4. Give people time to think

Delivering projects against a static set of requirements without taking a break to reflect on the project and get a clear outlook is a sure way to lose perspective and stifle innovation.

People need time and space so they can look beyond the current work in progress and reflect on how a product or service could look in the future. Allow people to get away from their desk and computer. Encourage conversations outside the project. Give people time to think so they have an opportunity to tackle problems with a fresh mind.

Let’s answer a question together

How can we (UXers) make routines to contribute to the intention of wellness for people, work, projects, communities and economies for an enlightened future society?

We need your help to answer: how can we make meaningful work?

What if you…

  • Possess all the social permission you need to change personal habits?
  • Spent an hour of everyday examining the potential for significance of a project?
  • Began listening to and imploring others for their motives rather than their threats?
  • Replace “what do I stand to lose?” with “what might we all need to gain?”
  • Openly discussed the projects you work on mattered and where the best work felt like play and the best play felt like work?
  • Welcomed all disciplines to create a broader ‘community of aspiration’ and signed an implicit contract to make meaningful work for every project we put our hands to?

It is the ability of teams to come together and intentionally create something great that enables organisations to achieve stellar results. With the help of integrated approaches. and the practices that guide them, we’ll not only become better at working well together but also, hopefully, get more enjoyment from our work.

What makes work meaningful work for you? Share your thoughts in the forums.

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