Humble Design Leadership + Design Agency and Experience Design Evolution with Aleksandra Melnikova — DT101 E33
Welcome to the Design Thinking 101 podcast! I'm Dawan Stanford, your host. Today I'll be interviewing Aleksandra Melnikova and talking about her position as the leader of a design thinking team at Poke in London, England.
In this episode, we talk about humble design leadership and how design is evolving to serve our clients and the world better. Aleksandra tells us about her broad background in her early years of design thinking with art, sculpture, and drawing education.
Today, we explore Aleksandra's position and her team at Poke in London, how she leads a team with a wide array of talents, and how she inspires others in the realm of design thinking by mentoring others outside of work.
Aleksandra likes to start from a blank sheet of paper and admitting that her team is wrong. She fosters the culture of not being afraid to ask questions and be blunt about the information and what is going right and wrong. She encourages her team to spend 80% of their time on questioning. She believes the answer she needs will come to her when the question is formulated in the right way.
Aleksandra compares the evaluation process from before to today, where she is getting away from the presentation culture and moving towards collaboration. She enjoys going into a business and looking at their workflow as a point of reference to start her work with the client. "We are communicators of connections in this world," and Aleksandra believes these connections are systematic connections, and they more they are exposed, the better the end product.
This episode also offers a look at the shift in approach to user design, and how the previous system of UX design was disjointed compared to today's design thinking process of a team working together to manage the entire project. She talks about exposing research and data to clients that they have not synthesized into their operations, and how the data set is made into practical actions to solve problems. She also talks about how her team acts as a facilitator to the design thinking process.
Bio
Aleksandra's mission is to bring the power of connected disciplines into design, research, and team management. Her background is in the Arts and Product Service Systems Design, her playground for creating new methods, tools, and approaches that frequently challenge existing structures and the status quo. Two of her biggest strengths are storytelling and system thinking.
During the past 11 years, Aleksandra has worked from both the client and agency perspective and successfully delivered digital experiences for companies such as VISA, Lloyds, TSB, SKY, Aviva, VSO, GSK, and British Airways, and she has led the experience design team within Publicis•Poke. She has collaborated with UK universities, mentored at Global Service Jam, and has been a speaker on the topics of connections between literature, art, and design.
In This Episode
[01:30] Aleksandra’s journey in design thinking.
[05:04] She describes the team she leads at Poke in London.
[05:25] How Aleksandra brings out the best in her team, which has a wide array of talents.
[06:58] Aleksandra coaches humility with her team, based on the ever-changing world and the lack of knowledge we have because our world changes so fast.
[08:56] How Aleksandra assists clients in adapting to this process of questioning when they are working together.
[10:50] Tuning the relationship with the client when they haven’t worked with a team who uses design thinking.
[13:06] How blurring the boundaries on design affects the work being done by her team.
[15:03] Is there a shift in approach to experience design?
[18:54] The five why questions Aleksandra uses when having conversations with her clients.
[20:08] Viewing your project from the protagonist's viewpoint is helpful with design thinking.
[22:14] Elements and engagements that is making Aleksandra’s work possible.
[24:09] How Aleksandra uses simple interviews and other elements to create valuable data for her clients.
[26:45] The value of the journey in the process of design thinking and how Aleksandra is against selling deliverables.
[30:41] Where can you find innovation in design thinking.
[35:47] Advice Aleksandra gives to emerging designers.
[40:08] The ethical role expanding and emerging in the design process.
[44:17] Thinking about the future and what is the worst thing that can happen if you say “no” to an idea or action.
[50:57] Use of technology and how technology can impact work.
[52:21] Don’t get too focused on the mono tools or methods and using them for every project.
[55:46] “Best practice” means “stop thinking”.
[57:34] Looking forward to what can lead to transformation can lead to interesting results.
Links and Resources
Design for the Real World by Victor Papanek
Ruined by Design by Mike Monteiro
Aleksandra Meinikova on Medium
Aleksandra on Twitter
Aleksandra on the Web
Find Aleksandra on LinkedIn
Women Talk Design
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