The Four Powers of Design: a Value Model in Design Management

The Four Powers of Design: a Value Model in Design Management

D M I D E S I G N M A N A G E M E N T I N S T I T U T E A R T I C L E R E P R I N T Design Management Review The Four Powers of Design: A Value Model in Design Management Brigitte Borja de Mozota, Professor, Université Paris X Reprint #06172BOR44 This article was first published in Design Management Review Vol. 17 No. 2 Adding Value Through Design Copyright © Spring 2006 by the Design Management InstituteSM. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without written permission. To place an order or receive photocopy permission, contact DMI via phone at (617) 338-6380, Fax (617) 338-6570, or E-mail: [email protected]. The Design Management Institute, DMI, and the design mark are service marks of the Design Management Institute. www.dmi.org STRATEGY The Four Powers of Design: A Value Model in Design Management by Brigitte Borja de Mozota his analysis proposes a framework to bridge the gap between the world of Tdesigners and the world of managers. Illuminating her thesis with examples from Steelcase, Decathlon, and other companies, Brigitte Borja de Mozota parallels design’s ability to differentiate, integrate, transform, and contribute to the enterprise and bottom-line results with a corporate focus on markets, processes, talent, and finances. In summer 2005, BusinessWeek pub- Although the trend in favor of lished a 20-page special report on build- design can be seen as a way to promote ing innovative companies.”1 The report design as a qualified partner for celebrates the emergence of a “creativity innovation and management, it’s a economy” in which managers are start- trend that tends to forget about design ing to discover “design strategy.” In management—a simplistic view that addition, Innovation 2005, Boston risks relegating design skills to the Consulting Group’s second annual sur- Brigitte Borja de Mozota, vague realm of creativity and the devel- vey of 940 senior executives, ranked two Professor, Management opment of “wow” products, conveying icons of the design community, Apple Science, Université Paris X, the idea that merely collaborating with and Sony, in the top five of the world’s ESSEC, France, designers is enough. twenty most innovative companies. DMI Life Fellow Instead, business managers should Taking their cue from the creativity know about design management’s economy, universities and business power to create value in companies, schools from Toronto to Paris are taking up new collaborations with design 1. “Get Creative: How to Build Innovative schools. Companies,” BusinessWeek, August 1, 2005. 44 Design Management Review Spring 2006 The Four Powers of Design: A Value Model in Design Management which has been proven through research and can processes (time to market, building consen- also be demonstrated through management con- sus in teams using visualization skills); cepts such as Michael Porter’s value chain. In this design as a process that favors a modular article, I hope to describe to design professionals and platform architecture of product lines, a research-based value model for design manage- user-oriented innovation models, and ment and to convey to them how this model can fuzzy-front-end project management be implemented using Robert Kaplan’s and 3. Design as transformer: Design as a David Norton’s Balanced Score Card (BSC) deci- resource for creating new business opportu- sion tool2—a tool that should be familiar to all nities; for improving the company’s ability kinds of business managers. to cope with change; or (in the case of The Four Powers of Design advanced design) as an expertise to better interpret the company and the marketplace My research on design-oriented European SMEs became the basis of a value model for design as 4. Design as good business: Design as a differentiator, integrator, and transformer.3 It source of increased sales and better mar- also introduced the concept of the four powers gins, more brand value, greater market of design, in the context of management science. share, better return on investment (ROI); These four powers are: design as a resource for society at large (inclusive design, sustainable design) 1. Design as differentiator: Design as a source of competitive advantage on the market 2. For more information on the Balanced Score Card methodology, see R. Kaplan and D. Norton, “Linking through brand equity, customer loyalty, the Balanced Scorecard to Strategy,” California price premium, or customer orientation Management Review, vol. 39 (1996), no. 1. 2. Design as integrator: Design as a resource 3. Brigitte Borja de Mozota, “Design and Competitive Edge: A Model for Design Management Excellence in that improves new product development European SMEs,” DMI Academic Review, 2 (2002). DESIGN Controling design Design leadership. Design as resource AS STRATEGY ROI & business Coherence of the for the challenges of performance and design system and contemporary brand value. driving the future managers—Socially “advanced design.” responsible enterprise. DESIGN Design research Integrating design Integrating design in AS PROCESS methods—ethno in other processes: management decision design, etc. brand, innovation, processes. DM as managing the TQM. DM as inventing the design function. DM as improving the future and “sense performance of building” in a processes. changing environment. DM for the quality of staff. DESIGN Integrating design in AS STYLING marketing, R&D, corporate communications. DM as managing a design project. MANAGEMENT AS MANAGEMENT AS MANAGEMENT AS COMMAND & CONTROL ART OF COLLECTIVE MANAGING CHANGE ACTION Figure 1. Design management is defined by what you think of design (vertical axis: the “learning ladder” of design), and by what you think of management (horizontal axis). Design Management Review Spring 2006 45 Adding Value Through Design Design in the Value Management Model by making a well-designed product. And a superi- Design is thus fairly easily integrated into the or result is defined as a greater ratio between the value management model. So what is the prob- profits realized and the capital invested. lem? Why are designers still suffering from lack Let us assume that your organization has a of recognition and support from managers? Our result that is close to the mean of your industry insight is that there are two missing links: and that you think design can bring better value to your organization. Or perhaps you want to 1. Designers’ lack of knowledge of manage- invent a new business unit that boasts a superior ment concepts and of management EVA. How do you teach managers and CEOs to as a science be better at their jobs because of the input of 2. Designers’ difficulty in implementing a design? value model in their everyday practices You can explain that through design they can develop a competitive advantage that will be val- In addition, the scope of design management ued by the market—truly, an objective of any has changed. This is the result of business’ manager (Figure 2). But how do you build that changed understanding of the place of design in advantage? an organization, as well as of designers’ changed understanding of the scope of business manage- First, consider that competitive advantage can ment (Figure 1 on page 45). In this way, design take two forms: management spreads from project design man- agement to strategic design management in a 1. Design as differentiator. External, market- dynamic process. based advantage derived from the design- Before the value of design to a firm can be based differentiation of the company’s prod- measured, it is crucial to measure that firm’s effi- uct or service (design of products, design as ciency in relation to the efficiency of its industry. perceived value, brand design value, corpo- Each market sector has its specific growth rate image) potential and its norms in terms of profitability. 2. Design as coordinator or integrator. In other words, the first question to ask a design Internal competitive advantage that comes manager is whether the superior product or from a unique, invisible, and difficult-to-imi- service achieved through design brings profits tate combination of organizational processes superior to the mean in the industry. and resources (that is, a resource-based view: Designers should keep in mind that there are design as process, design as knowledge, more differences among companies in the same design science, design as resource, advanced industry than among companies across indus- design for new business) tries. In every industry, technology, distribution, and marketing tend to be similar. A company Companies in the first camp are really thinking competes through inventing a combination of of design in a reputational, or brand, context. these resources that make its offer unique and its Companies in the second camp understand EVA (economic value added) superior. Value in design as a core competency. management science happens by achieving a Now, consider that EVA comes from two result superior to that of the competition, not just types of value: financial and substantial. ECONOMIC VALUE ADDED (EVA) SUBSTANTIAL VALUE FINANCIAL VALUE Customer Performance Strategic Value Value Value COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE (External or Resource Based) Figure 2. A competitive advantage brings economic value added if both substantial value and financial value are created. 46 Design Management Review Spring 2006 The Four Powers of Design: A Value Model in Design Management Financial value is the value created for the Score Card (BSC) methodology mentioned company

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