Design Council – a case study
Wednesday, January 20th, 2010 at 10:11 am
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Socialising Best Practice and Lessons Learnt
The Design Council, a UK Government-funded strategic body, promotes the use of design through the UK. They help business be better at doing what they do by instilling design thinking and by helping designers be more effective and public services more efficient.
Having embarked upon the development of The Designers’ Business Knowledge Base (DBKB) - an essential Best Practice resource from which design professionals, design buyers and design educators can seek inspiration and guidance - the client required a strategic overlay describing how the DBKB could be delivered as an interactive communication and collaboration tool.
The core of our work saw the development of a Digital Framework for the DBKB focusing on how users could submit and extract experience-based stories and case studies. Insights were by way of formal submissions and more conversational stories of the kind designers of all ages and experience could submit using simple, easy-to-use social software tools.
The framework was constructed on four pillars; The User Model, Content Model, Business Model and Sustainability Model.
- The User Model proposed a variety of benefits and rewards for each of the stakeholder groups, including those of a social, emotional, financial and experiential kind.
- The Content Model explored how the resource would harness user-generated content to provide insightful and inspiring best practice examples.
- The Business Model looked at and made recommendations as to how The Design Council could monetise the service
- And finally, the Sustainability Model took inspiration from what we believed to be some of the more forward-thinking online services around, and how the DBKB could integrate their behaviours in order to be more future-proofed.
The crux of our strategic recommendations was for The Design Council to harness its existing offline design practitioner network connections for traditional push messaging, but also to engage them in more dynamic and ongoing online conversation in order to trawl for ongoing insights and knowledge around design best practice. The development of best practice guidelines in a traditional sense had proven to be expensive, and often the outcome would date very quickly. Digitally captured knowledge could be kept alive, nurtured and extended by the community, and knowledge shared over time to the extent that the community became self-helpers.
Our recommended process and methodology is currently being developed ready for implementation.
Categories: Business, Case Studies, Collaboration, Online Communities, Social Business Design.
Tags: best practice, design, KM








