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March | April 2010 Kate Rutter <[email protected]> Pen & paper techniques for getting from research to design WORKBOOK
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Workbook : Pen & Paper Tools for getting from Research to Design [See->Sort->Sketch]

Aug 17, 2014

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Kate Rutter

Workbook/handout from the SXSW 2010 panel Pen and Paper Tools for getting from Research to Design.
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Page 1: Workbook : Pen & Paper Tools for getting from Research to Design [See->Sort->Sketch]

March | April 2010 Kate Rutter <[email protected]>

Pen & paper techniques for getting from research to design

WORKBOOK

Page 2: Workbook : Pen & Paper Tools for getting from Research to Design [See->Sort->Sketch]
Page 3: Workbook : Pen & Paper Tools for getting from Research to Design [See->Sort->Sketch]

So that the resulting designs�reflect the people and their needs.

Images help groups move

faster...together

Visual ideas get through

faster

Pictures communicate a more complete

idea

Why visuals work

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The process

March | April 2010 : p. 4

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The toolkit

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Jotting

Transcripts

Note taking

Spreadsheets

Coding

And more!

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Jotting

Jotting breaks down observations into their most elemental parts and captures

the weight of each idea.

•  As you review transcripts, pull out key words and phrases and jot them down.

•  Jot the words that you heard, plus small sketches and accents to illustrate the ideas and make them visually recognizable.

•  Big ideas deserve more ink on paper. Make the text bigger, underline it, give it a border, or try other ways to make the idea stand out.

•  Jotting is a visual way to track research data. It illustrates and accents the data, so it becomes memorable and rediscoverable.

•  Important ideas risk being lost in the analysis process. Using visual cues to call out the important concepts keeps them highly visible.

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Clustering

Theme Boards

Relationship Models

Word Sort

Capture Boards

Bottom-up Sorting

And more!

Affinity Diagrams

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Theme boards display the results of synthesis. They

show the patterns and themes that act as a bridge

to the design process.

Theme Boards

•  Working with the project team, go through the jots and begin to pull related ideas together.

•  Stick related ideas together on a board, a large piece of paper, or even a wall.

•  Keep moving ideas around until clear themes emerge.

•  Give each theme a memorable, concise, and visible label.

•  The goal of theme boards is to look across all research findings and start to pull together the big themes.

•  Theme boards are a group activity. They encourage everyone on the team to express what they see as the big themes, and have directed conversations on what it all means.

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Concept Sketches

Books

Personas

Reports

Presentations

Video Reels

Decks

And more!

Storyboards

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Concept sketches capture a story, illustrate the

relationships of elements, or a communicate a set of

related ideas.

Concept Sketching •  Look at the big themes and figure out what story

you want to tell. (If you’re not sure, just start writing a few notes to yourself on scrap paper. The story will emerge.)

•  Pick a visualization that’s good for communicating what’s important about the story.

•  Do a rough sketch. Iterate and evolve it. You will probably do a couple revisions.

•  Enhance the final version using the all the tools from jotting.

•  Concept sketches help you tell stories about what you learned, what’s important, and what opportunities and actions it points towards.

•  Concept sketches should be rich but “get-able” visuals that others can remember and refer back to.

* The whole point * * The whole point *

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Capture boards consolidate and collect related info in one visible, analog space.

Capture Boards

Bottom-up trees help organize related data into bundled concepts. Use them to identify emergent patterns and themes.

Bottom-up Trees

Tools & Techniques

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Graphs show a relationship of data elements. They often tell a story that emphasizes comparison and time. Variations like pie charts and Venn diagrams show relationships of parts to a whole.

Graphs

Grids show important categories or dimensions as columns and rows. They make us want to fill in the blanks. They often tell a story of the completeness or incompleteness of a total landscape.

Grids

Tools & Techniques

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Mind Maps show a free association of concepts and their implications. They tell the story of what we know and where we could go with it, and are often used as a starting point for extending ideas.

Mind Maps

2 x 2s plot similar items along two axes to illuminate major differences. They often tell a story about which options are more desirable, forward-looking, appropriate, etc.

2 x 2s

Tools & Techniques

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Mandalas communicate the implications of a strong, core idea through several radiating layers or dimensions. They tell a multi-level story of an interrelated ecosystem with a high-level themes and low-level details.

Tools & Techniques

Mandalas

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Presentation content & imagery...�• Kate Rutter, Adaptive Path | www.intelleto.com • Leah Buley, Adaptive Path | www.ugleah.com • Rachel Hinman, Adaptive Path | rachelhinman.com (jots)

Things to read...�• The Mind Map Book, by Tony Buzan • Rapid Viz, by Kurt Hanks and Larry Belliston •  The Back of the Napkin, by Dan Roam • Rapid Problem Solving with Post-it Notes, by David Straker • Graphic Facilitation, by David Sibbert (Grove Publishing) • Thinking with a Pencil, by Henning Nelms

Places to go to get inspired...�• Flickr,(www.flickr.com) search for “sketchnotes”, “visual thinking,” “mind maps” and “graphic recording” • Indexed: indexed.blogspot.com is a daily collection of humorous graphs and charts

Places to learn...�• VizThink is a community of visual practitioners. They have an online community and a wiki with great resources. www.vizthink.com | wiki.vizthink.com • www.visual-literacy.org has a periodic chart of visualizations that is quite inspiring. • International Forum of Visual Practitioners is a professional association of visual folks: http://www.ifvp.org/ • David Gray’s visual thinking school: http://www.squidoo.com/communicationnation • MIT Sketching tutorials: http://web.mit.edu/2.009/www/resources/sketchingTutorials.html�• The Grove: consulting, training, books and presentations. www.grove.com • xPlane : consulting, training and presentations. www.xplane.com

Credits & Resources

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